Animations
- Getting Started
- Resources
- Key concepts
- Social
- Misc
Technology choices
Animations are often used to make applications come alive. Nowadays, browsers have good support for CSS animations, and there are various libraries that provide fast Javascript-based animations. There's also an upcoming Web API and a polyfill if you like living on the bleeding edge.
Mithril does not provide any animation APIs per se, since these other options are more than sufficient to achieve rich, complex animations. Mithril does, however, offer hooks to make life easier in some specific cases where it's traditionally difficult to make animations work.
Animation on element creation
Animating an element via CSS when the element is created couldn't be simpler. Just add an animation to a CSS class normally:
.fancy {animation:fade-in 0.5s;}
@keyframes fade-in {
from {opacity:0;}
to {opacity:1;}
}
var FancyComponent = {
view: function() {
return m(".fancy", "Hello world")
}
}
m.mount(document.body, FancyComponent)
Animation on element removal
The problem with animating before removing an element is that we must wait until the animation is complete before we can actually remove the element. Fortunately, Mithril offers the onbeforeremove
hook that allows us to defer the removal of an element.
Let's create an exit
animation that fades opacity
from 1 to 0.
.exit {animation:fade-out 0.5s;}
@keyframes fade-out {
from {opacity:1;}
to {opacity:0;}
}
Now let's create a contrived component that shows and hides the FancyComponent
we created in the previous section:
var on = true
var Toggler = {
view: function() {
return [
m("button", {onclick: function() {on = !on}}, "Toggle"),
on ? m(FancyComponent) : null,
]
}
}
Next, let's modify FancyComponent
so that it fades out when removed:
var FancyComponent = {
onbeforeremove: function(vnode) {
vnode.dom.classList.add("exit")
return new Promise(function(resolve) {
vnode.dom.addEventListener("animationend", resolve)
})
},
view: function() {
return m(".fancy", "Hello world")
}
}
vnode.dom
points to the root DOM element of the component (<div class="fancy">
). We use the classList API here to add an exit
class to <div class="fancy">
.
Then we return a Promise that resolves when the animationend
event fires. When we return a promise from onbeforeremove
, Mithril waits until the promise is resolved and only then it removes the element. In this case, it waits for the exit animation to finish.
We can verify that both the enter and exit animations work by mounting the Toggler
component:
m.mount(document.body, Toggler)
Note that the onbeforeremove
hook only fires on the element that loses its parentNode
when an element gets detached from the DOM. This behavior is by design and exists to prevent a potential jarring user experience where every conceivable exit animation on the page would run on a route change. If your exit animation is not running, make sure to attach the onbeforeremove
handler as high up the tree as it makes sense to ensure that your animation code is called.
Performance
When creating animations, it's recommended that you only use the opacity
and transform
CSS rules, since these can be hardware-accelerated by modern browsers and yield better performance than animating top
, left
, width
, and height
.
It's also recommended that you avoid the box-shadow
rule and selectors like :nth-child
, since these are also resource intensive options. If you want to animate a box-shadow
, consider putting the box-shadow
rule on a pseudo element, and animate that element's opacity instead. Other things that can be expensive include large or dynamically scaled images and overlapping elements with different position
values (e.g. an absolute positioned element over a fixed element).
License: MIT. © Leo Horie.