AngularJS 1.3 provides animation hooks for common directives such as ngRepeat
, ngSwitch
, and ngView
, as well as custom directives
via the $animate
service. These animation hooks are set in place to trigger animations during the life cycle of various directives and when
triggered, will attempt to perform a CSS Transition, CSS Keyframe Animation or a JavaScript callback Animation (depending on if an animation is
placed on the given directive). Animations can be placed using vanilla CSS by following the naming conventions set in place by AngularJS
or with JavaScript code when it's defined as a factory.
Animations are not available unless you include the ngAnimate
module as a dependency within your application.
Below is a quick example of animations being enabled for ngShow
and ngHide
:
<div ng-init="checked=true">
<label>
<input type="checkbox" ng-model="checked" style="float:left; margin-right:10px;"> Is Visible...
</label>
<div class="check-element sample-show-hide" ng-show="checked" style="clear:both;">
Visible...
</div>
</div>
.sample-show-hide {
padding:10px;
border:1px solid black;
background:white;
}
.sample-show-hide {
-webkit-transition:all linear 0.5s;
transition:all linear 0.5s;
}
.sample-show-hide.ng-hide {
opacity:0;
}
See the API docs for ngAnimate
for instructions on installing the module.
You may also want to setup a separate CSS file for defining CSS-based animations.
Animations in AngularJS are completely based on CSS classes. As long as you have a CSS class attached to a HTML element within your website, you can apply animations to it. Lets say for example that we have an HTML template with a repeater in it like so:
<div ng-repeat="item in items" class="repeated-item">
{{ item.id }}
</div>
As you can see, the .repeated-item
class is present on the element that will be repeated and this class will be
used as a reference within our application's CSS and/or JavaScript animation code to tell AngularJS to perform an animation.
As ngRepeat does its thing, each time a new item is added into the list, ngRepeat will add
a ng-enter
class name to the element that is being added. When removed it will apply a ng-leave
class name and when moved around
it will apply a ng-move
class name.
Taking a look at the following CSS code, we can see some transition and keyframe animation code set for each of those events that occur when ngRepeat triggers them:
/*
We're using CSS transitions for when
the enter and move events are triggered
for the element that has the .repeated-item
class
*/
.repeated-item.ng-enter, .repeated-item.ng-move {
-webkit-transition:0.5s linear all;
-moz-transition:0.5s linear all;
-o-transition:0.5s linear all;
transition:0.5s linear all;
opacity:0;
}
/*
The ng-enter-active and ng-move-active
are where the transition destination properties
are set so that the animation knows what to
animate.
*/
.repeated-item.ng-enter.ng-enter-active,
.repeated-item.ng-move.ng-move-active {
opacity:1;
}
/*
We're using CSS keyframe animations for when
the leave event is triggered for the element
that has the .repeated-item class
*/
.repeated-item.ng-leave {
-webkit-animation:0.5s my_animation;
-moz-animation:0.5s my_animation;
-o-animation:0.5s my_animation;
animation:0.5s my_animation;
}
@keyframes my_animation {
from { opacity:1; }
to { opacity:0; }
}
/*
Unfortunately each browser vendor requires
its own definition of keyframe animation code...
*/
@-webkit-keyframes my_animation {
from { opacity:1; }
to { opacity:0; }
}
@-moz-keyframes my_animation {
from { opacity:1; }
to { opacity:0; }
}
@-o-keyframes my_animation {
from { opacity:1; }
to { opacity:0; }
}
The same approach to animation can be used using JavaScript code (jQuery is used within to perform animations):
myModule.animation('.repeated-item', function() {
return {
enter : function(element, done) {
element.css('opacity',0);
jQuery(element).animate({
opacity: 1
}, done);
// optional onDone or onCancel callback
// function to handle any post-animation
// cleanup operations
return function(isCancelled) {
if(isCancelled) {
jQuery(element).stop();
}
}
},
leave : function(element, done) {
element.css('opacity', 1);
jQuery(element).animate({
opacity: 0
}, done);
// optional onDone or onCancel callback
// function to handle any post-animation
// cleanup operations
return function(isCancelled) {
if(isCancelled) {
jQuery(element).stop();
}
}
},
move : function(element, done) {
element.css('opacity', 0);
jQuery(element).animate({
opacity: 1
}, done);
// optional onDone or onCancel callback
// function to handle any post-animation
// cleanup operations
return function(isCancelled) {
if(isCancelled) {
jQuery(element).stop();
}
}
},
// you can also capture these animation events
addClass : function(element, className, done) {},
removeClass : function(element, className, done) {}
}
});
With these generated CSS class names present on the element at the time, AngularJS automatically figures out whether to perform a CSS and/or JavaScript animation. If both CSS and JavaScript animation code is present, and match the CSS class name on the element, then AngularJS will run both animations at the same time.
AngularJS also pays attention to CSS class changes on elements by triggering the add and remove hooks. This means that if a CSS class is added to or removed from an element then an animation can be executed in between, before the CSS class addition or removal is finalized. (Keep in mind that AngularJS will only be able to capture class changes if an expression or the ng-class directive is used on the element.)
The example below shows how to perform animations during class changes:
<p>
<input type="button" value="set" ng-click="myCssVar='css-class'">
<input type="button" value="clear" ng-click="myCssVar=''">
<br>
<span ng-class="myCssVar">CSS-Animated Text</span>
</p>
.css-class-add, .css-class-remove {
-webkit-transition:all cubic-bezier(0.250, 0.460, 0.450, 0.940) 0.5s;
-moz-transition:all cubic-bezier(0.250, 0.460, 0.450, 0.940) 0.5s;
-o-transition:all cubic-bezier(0.250, 0.460, 0.450, 0.940) 0.5s;
transition:all cubic-bezier(0.250, 0.460, 0.450, 0.940) 0.5s;
}
.css-class,
.css-class-add.css-class-add-active {
color: red;
font-size:3em;
}
.css-class-remove.css-class-remove-active {
font-size:1.0em;
color:black;
}
Although the CSS is a little different then what we saw before, the idea is the same.
A handful of common AngularJS directives support and trigger animation hooks whenever any major event occurs during its life cycle. The table below explains in detail which animation events are triggered
Directive | Supported Animations |
---|---|
ngRepeat | enter, leave, and move |
ngView | enter and leave |
ngInclude | enter and leave |
ngSwitch | enter and leave |
ngIf | enter and leave |
ngClass or {{class}} | add and remove |
ngShow & ngHide | add and remove (the ng-hide class value) |
For a full breakdown of the steps involved during each animation event, refer to the API docs.
Animations within custom directives can also be established by injecting $animate
directly into your directive and
making calls to it when needed.
myModule.directive('my-directive', ['$animate', function($animate) {
return function(scope, element, attrs) {
element.on('click', function() {
if(element.hasClass('clicked')) {
$animate.removeClass(element, 'clicked');
} else {
$animate.addClass(element, 'clicked');
}
});
};
}]);
For a full breakdown of each method available on $animate
, see the API documentation.
To see a complete demo, see the animation step within the AngularJS phonecat tutorial.