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CSS Tip! 🐳 You can add little details like this scale down on scroll effect with scroll-driven animations and some sticky positioning 🤙 section { animation: scale-down; animation-timeline: view(); animation-range: exit; } @​keyframes scale-down { to { scale 0.8; } ] In this smaller example, you can lean into...

146,270 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren •via X (Twitter)

10 Kommentare

Profilbild von jhey ▲🐻🎈
jhey ▲🐻🎈vor 2 Jahren

Here's that @CodePen link! 🐳 Good in all browsers 🤙 Jus a nice little touch that isn't over the top 🫶

Profilbild von SM Irving
SM Irvingvor 2 Jahren

animation-timeline and animation-range are too freakin good. Can't wait until support is good enough to use it everywhere in production. Will be so nicwe to not have to drop into JS just to make a scroll animation work.

Profilbild von jhey ▲🐻🎈
jhey ▲🐻🎈vor 2 Jahren

This 💯💯💯 Goal is that we'll be well versed in time for it to land 🚀

Profilbild von miguel
miguelvor 2 Jahren

codepen?

Profilbild von Naveen
Naveenvor 2 Jahren

Can this be done in @tailwindcss 🤔

Profilbild von jhey ▲🐻🎈
jhey ▲🐻🎈vor 2 Jahren

@tailwindcss Sure can! Any of my demos can be done in Tailwind 💯

Profilbild von Damien Toscano 💻✨
Damien Toscano 💻✨vor 2 Jahren

Man, you answer so many css questions even before I know I have the questions in mind 😜

Profilbild von Arun
Arunvor 2 Jahren

This is beautiful! Can’t find the codepen link tho 🤔

Profilbild von Feaven
Feavenvor 2 Jahren

Jhey i love you

Profilbild von Mansoor Ali ✨ WordPress Expert
Mansoor Ali ✨ WordPress Expertvor 2 Jahren

nice

Ähnliche Videos

CSS Tip! 📜 You can use scroll-driven animations to progressively enhance collapsing a floating call to action 🤏 .cta { animation: shrink; animation-timeline: scroll(); animation-range: 0 100px; } @​keyframes shrink { to { width: 48px; } } That's the gist of it. Use the body scroll position with animation-timeline: scroll(). Define the animation-range as when you have scrolled 100px. There's a little more though 🤓 That would "scrub" the width animation. Ideally, you want to trigger that animation. You could animate a custom property with steps() timing and use that to define the width ✨ @​property --scrub { syntax: ' '; inherits: true; initial-value: 0; } body { animation: scrub both steps(1, end); animation-timeline: scroll(); animation-range: 0 100px; } Then transition the --scrub property on the CTA and use it for the width 🤙 .cta { transition: --scrub 0.2s; width: calc(48px + (120px * (1 - (var(--scrub) / 100)))); } Other animations are a matter of preference and timing. For example, you could then make the hand wave, scale down the size, and then slide a gradient across 😉 They have the same structure and technique as the original concept. Waving the hand? 👋 Run it twice, offset the transform-origin. .hand { animation: wave both linear 2; animation-timeline: scroll(); animation-range: 30vh 50vh; transform-origin: 65% 75%; } @​keyframes wave { 50% { rotate: 20deg; } } How's it progressively enhanced? Wrap everything in a @​supports query and a @​media query. If there isn't support, users still get a good experience. It's a floating action button that's circular and already collapsed 🤙 @​supports(animation-timeline: scroll()) { @​media(prefers-reduced-motion: no-preference) {...} } Definitely have a play with the code. Amazing what we're going to be able to do with CSS alone! 🔥 CodePen.IO link below! 👇

jhey ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ

177,781 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren

CSS Tip! ✨ You can create these parallax effects and image cross-fades with scroll-driven animations 🤙 img { animation: fade; animation-timeline: view(); mix-blend-mode: plus-lighter } img:last-of-type { animation-direction: reverse; } @​keyframes fade { to { opacity: 0; }} This one's fun! 😁 The trick with the cross-fading image is to make use of one animation that runs at the same time on two images inside a container. You use the same animation, animation-timeline, and animation-range. But, you use animation-direction: reverse on one of the images so they go in the opposite direction 🫶 The use of mix-blend-mode: plus-lighter; produces a better cross-fade result 💯 A viewTimeline (view()) works because you know that both images are the same height. The range you can use is img { animation-timeline: view(); animation-range: cover 45% cover 55%; } That means when the image has covered 45% of the scrollport (In this case, the window), start the animation. And finish when it has covered 55% 🎬 How about the slight parallax? This is a trick with calc(). You know the top of the small image and the big image line up. And you can do this by absolutely placing the caption outside of the small image. The trick is to translate the small image by a distance so it lines up with the bottom of the big image. You can do that like this :root { --catch-up: calc( var(--big-height) - var(--small-height) ); } @​keyframes move { to { translate: 0 var(--catch-up); }} Then drive that animation with a scroll-driven animation using the container of both images as the driver 🤙 /* section contains both images */ section { view-timeline: --container; } .img-fader { animation: catch-up both linear; animation-timeline: --container; animation-range: 50vh calc(100vh + (var(--big-height) * 0.25)); } That's it! Scroll-driven image cross-fading and parallax effects without any JavaScript. This demo will work in all browsers as there is some JavaScript in place where the API isn't supported 🤙 To do that, it uses GSAP ScrollTrigger 🏆 As always, any questions, requests, etc. hit me up! 🤙 CodePen.IO link below 👇

jhey ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ

242,074 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren

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jhey ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ

133,020 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren

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jhey ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ

116,462 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren

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jhey ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ

575,457 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren