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I can't stop seeing #CSS View Transitions! here I'm animating new `node.textContent`, letting the browser handle the morph while bringing in custom animations (and stagger) for stage enter and stage exit 🥲 try it

469,499 Aufrufe • vor 3 Jahren •via X (Twitter)

11 Kommentare

Profilbild von Adam Argyle
Adam Argylevor 3 Jahren

get a full ramp up from @bramus from @CSSDayConf

Profilbild von Adam Argyle
Adam Argylevor 3 Jahren

get a quick overview from this YouTube short I made

Profilbild von Adam Argyle
Adam Argylevor 3 Jahren

or this YouTube short

Profilbild von Adam Argyle
Adam Argylevor 3 Jahren

or peep some great docs from @jaffathecake

Profilbild von Tucker Massad
Tucker Massadvor 3 Jahren

You’d definitely enjoy my take on this animation style

Profilbild von Adam Argyle
Adam Argylevor 3 Jahren

Confirm, I def enjoy this 🙂

Profilbild von Una 🇺🇦
Una 🇺🇦vor 3 Jahren

Smooooth 😍

Profilbild von simey
simeyvor 3 Jahren

Dude that's so nice, I guess you can also do a little js to check if # is lower than previous and apply a CSS class to run an opposite animation? wonder how long it'll be before we can use it. Still waiting for houdini properties and values,

Profilbild von Adam Argyle
Adam Argylevor 3 Jahren

i could def make it go back the other way, fun idea! if you want the animation for every browser, you need to wait, but if you're down to progressively enhance, then you can start today. here's one where i progressively enhance it

Profilbild von Lorenzo
Lorenzovor 3 Jahren

I thought it only worked for navigating to a different pages. What do you mean by morph?

Profilbild von Adam Argyle
Adam Argylevor 3 Jahren

there's 2 types of view transitions! you're referring to the MP (multipage) type, which is still behind a flag in Canary. this is the SPA type, aka the javascript API, which is in Chrome stable. same idea, just a different trigger: - MPA triggered by page nav - SPA by JS 👍🏻

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