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Future CSS Tip! 🔮 You can create responsive animated text reveals with CSS scroll-driven animations 🔥 section { /* The red element in the video */ view-timeline-name: --section; } p { animation: fill both linear; animation-timeline: --section; animation-range: cover; } keyframes fill { to { --fill: 1; } }...

408,585 views • 2 years ago •via X (Twitter)

10 Comments

jhey ▲🐻🎈's profile picture
jhey ▲🐻🎈2 years ago

Here's that @CodePen link! 🚀 This should work in Chrome 115+ 🤙 We could avoid using @ property but there's currently an issue where inline elements aren't getting animated as they once were (Raised an issue)

Maxim Leyzerovich's profile picture
Maxim Leyzerovich2 years ago

you are just killllllin’ it with these lately

Solar's profile picture
Solar2 years ago

I used to think I know CSS until I came across your account. These tips are jaw-dropping

Katai's profile picture
Katai2 years ago

And somehow the company spec will still want me to make it compatible with Internet Explorer.

Oscar Cornejo's profile picture
Oscar Cornejo2 years ago

👏🏼👏🏼

Rex Tech Guy's profile picture
Rex Tech Guy2 years ago

Great

Param | Graphic Designer | Thumbnail Designer's profile picture
Param | Graphic Designer | Thumbnail Designer2 years ago

This is sick!

jhey ▲🐻🎈's profile picture
jhey ▲🐻🎈2 years ago

Right? 😅 I was like "Whoah, CSS is owning this"

Michael's profile picture
Michael2 years ago

Will add this to my project

Deepak Rudra Paul's profile picture
Deepak Rudra Paul2 years ago

Didn't know that. Your CSS tips are very helpful

Related Videos

CSS Trick! ⚡️ You can use scroll-driven animation with background-attachment to create a dynamic glowing card scroller without JS 🔥 section { animation:vibe; animation-timeline:--list; } @​keyframes vibe { to{--hue:320;}} .glow {background: hsl(var(--hue) 80% 50%);} Here's how! 🤙 You can use the background-attachment trick used in other glow card demos 😎 article { background-attachment: fixed; } The difference here is that you aren't going to update the fixed background position with your pointer this time. It can remain fixed. The magic part is that as you scroll, the background will leave the card that's leaving and enter the card that's entering ✨ For the extra background glow, you can use a fixed pseudo element on the list container itself 💪 Once that's in place, you're only task is to change the color of the background as you scroll 🤔 Create a custom property declaration for the --hue @​property --base { inherits: true; syntax: ' '; initial-value: 0; } Then create an animation that updates this value @​keyframes accent { to { --hue: 320; }} The last piece is hooking it up to scroll and there is a little trick in here 👀 First, you need an inline scroll-timeline on the list ul { scroll-timeline: --list inline; } Then you can use timeline-scope to hoist that scroll-timeline up so a parent can use it. You then animate the custom property on this element and let the value cascade down to the places that need it 🔥 section { timeline-scope: --list; animation: accent both linear; animation-timeline: --list; } For example, the glow uses the --hue this way [data-glow] { background-image: radial-gradient( 150px 150px at 50% 50%, hsl(var(--hue) 100% 70% / 0.25), transparent ); } Lastly, scroll-snap is optional of course but plays nice with the scroll-driven animation demos ✨ The key for that is ul { scroll-snap-type: x mandatory; } li { scroll-snap-align: center; } That's it! Pretty fun trick to play with! 🤓 Any questions, let me know! Should we add it to the video walkthrough list? CodePen.IO link below! 👇

jhey ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ

116,458 views • 2 years ago

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 using the position to drive an animation that scales itself down as it leaves the viewport (Seen on the Apple Vision Pro site 🍏) The nice thing here is that if you don't have scroll-driven animations, the user still gets a good experience ✨ So how do you do it? There isn't much to it header { transform-origin: 50% 0%; animation: scale-down both ease-in; animation-timeline: view(); animation-range: exit; view-timeline: --header; } @​keyframes scale-down { to { scale: 0.8 0.8; } } That's it. The layout makes use of position: sticky so that the element stays in the shot whilst you scroll the page. As it leaves the page, it scales down inside the 🫶 The other smol animation here is fading the overlay on the video out 😎 Real easy. You may notice the view-timeline you defined above for the 👀 header { view-timeline: --header; } You have a pseudoelement on the text content of the header that lives inside a header > section::before { background: hsl(0 0% 0% / 0.75); opacity: 1; animation: fade both linear; animation-timeline: --header; animation-range: exit-crossing 0% exit 0%; } @​keyframes fade { to { opacity: 0; } } You use a slightly smaller range on this with exit-crossing to fade it out before you start the scale down animation 🤏 That's it! Thought this smaller example would be easier to grok for people 🙏 It's also covered with JavaScript if you really want it for your sites 🤙 CodePen.IO link below 👇

jhey ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ

146,064 views • 2 years ago

CSS Tip! 🚥 You can create these trending expanding scroll indicators with scroll-driven animations and flex 🤙 .indicator { animation: grow; animation-range: contain calc(50% - var(--size)...; animation-timeline: var(--card); } @​keyframes grow { 50% { flex: 3; }} What's the trick? Put the indicators in a container using flex layout and set a width larger than the number of indicators 😉 .indicators { aspect-ratio: 7 / 1; display: flex; } Importantly, set no gap 🤏 To mimic the gap set a transparent border on each indicator and set the background using padding-box .indicator { background: linear-gradient(#​fff, #​fff) padding-box; border-radius: 50px; border: 4px solid transparent; } Now for the animation. You want to create a view-timeline for each card that moves across 🤙 li:nth-of-type(1) { view-timeline: --one inline; } li:nth-of-type(2) { view-timeline: --two inline; } Make sure they use the inline axis too! The trick is hoisting these view-timeline so the indicators can use them with timeline-scope 👀 .track { timeline-scope: --one, --two, ...; } All that's left is for you to create the animation piece using some calc with the card size ⚡️ .indicator { --size: calc(var(--card-width) * 0.9); animation: grow both linear; animation-range: contain calc(50% - var(--size)) contain calc(50% + var(--size)); } .indicator:nth-of-type(1) { animation-timeline: --one; } .indicator:nth-of-type(2) { animation-timeline: --two; } @​keyframes grow { 50% { flex: 3; }} And there you have it, responsive scroll indicators using CSS scroll-driven animations 😎 Sprinkle a little JavaScript to make them clickable and scroll the the right card ✨ const shift = (event) => { if (event​.target.tagName === "BUTTON") { const index = [...event.target.parentNode.children].indexOf(event​.target); const item = document.querySelector(`li:nth-of-type(${index + 1})`); item.scrollIntoView({ behavior: "smooth", inline: "center" }); } }; As always, any questions or suggestions, let me know. I've put a JavaScript fallback in to use GSAP in browsers that don't have scroll-driven animations 🫶 CodePen.IO link below! 👇

jhey ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ

575,316 views • 2 years ago