If you work in a startup you will know that you barely have time to implement something properly. Spending time on animation is mostly seen as unnecessary. Also, when you do something without animations on the frontend side, you will always feel like something is missing. As a frontend developer which works in a little startup, I always want to add some little animations as quickly as possible to indicate user when something changes. So, I started to search for options to achieve this because without animations website looks so much pale, like woodwork without polishing.
Recently, I found the AutoAnimate
library that aims to animate things almost effortlessly. Also, they support all the major frontend frameworks right now which is awesome. It's like a gem for the tight-schedule startup workers. So, I implement AutoAnimate
in all of our frontend projects in one day. I know still so many things are not perfect on the animation side but having little is always better than none. So, today I will share how to implement auto-animate
to Vue 3 projects also I will explain some tricks I use for the edge cases.
In this article I will show examples and usage for Vue 3 but for the other frameworks, you can read documentation.
Creating Vue Project
I will use Vue 3, Vite, typescript, and tailwind to demonstrate how to add and use auto-animate
. Vue is not necessary you can use it in all the mainstream frontend frameworks that auto-animate
supports.
So, let's create and Vue 3 app with create-vue library created by the Vue team. These are my options to create the project.
✔ **Project name:** … auto-animate-example
✔ **Add TypeScript?** … No / Yes
✔ **Add JSX Support?** … No / Yes
✔ **Add Vue Router for Single Page Application development?** … No / Yes
✔ **Add Pinia for state management?** … No / Yes
✔ **Add Vitest for Unit Testing?** … No / Yes
✔ **Add an End-to-End Testing Solution?** › No
✔ **Add ESLint for code quality?** … No / Yes
✔ **Add Prettier for code formatting?** … No / Yes
Scaffolding project in .../projects/auto-animate-example...
Done. Now run:
**cd auto-animate-example**
**npm install**
**npm run dev**
Before running it I will add tailwind
and auto-animate
.
Adding Tailwind
You can add Tailwind with the commands below. When you have done it successfully you will have tailwind.config.js
and postcss.config.js
files inside the project folder.
npm install -D tailwindcss
npx tailwindcss init
The first thing l will do is update the tailwind.config.js
file name to tailwind.config.cjs
otherwise they won't work in the Vite project. You should do the same thing for postcss.config.js
too. Then, update the tailwind.config.cjs
file as shown below so tailwind will search your components to understand which classes are in use and which classes will be pruned.
/** @type {import('tailwindcss').Config} */
module.exports = {
content: [
"./index.html",
"./src/**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,vue}",
],
theme: {
extend: {},
},
plugins: [],
}
The next thing I will do is remove the src/assets/base.css
file and modify src/assets/main.css
as shown below. That way I can access all the tailwind classes in the whole project. The main.css
file imported main.ts
by default so you don't have to import it.
@tailwind base;
@tailwind components;
@tailwind utilities;
How AutoAnimate
Works?
As you can read from the documentation when the listed conditions below happen, your elements going to be animated.
- A child is added in the DOM.
- A child is removed in the DOM.
- A child is moved in the DOM.
Cool thing is, AutoAnimate
read user preference about animations with the prefers-reduced-motion
setting and disable animations automatically.
Adding AutoAnimate
Lastly, I will add auto-animate
to the project after that, I can show you examples of animating things in the project.
npm install @formkit/auto-animate
I will use auto-animate
as a global directive so, I need to configure it that way. I always separate libraries that need configuration under the plugins
folder to prevent spaghetti code in the main.ts
file. Hence, I will create a file named src/plugins/auto-animate.ts
to configure auto-animate
.
// src/plugins/auto-animate.js file
import { autoAnimatePlugin } from '@formkit/auto-animate/vue'
import type { App } from 'vue';
export default (app: App): App => {
return app.use(autoAnimatePlugin);
};
// main.ts file
import { createApp } from 'vue'
import App from './App.vue'
import initAutoAnimate from '@/plugins/auto-animate';
import './assets/main.css'
const app = createApp(App);
initAutoAnimate(app);
app.mount('#app');
We are ready to go. So I will run the project with npm run dev
command.
I will not bother you with creating components etc. I will just show examples in dummy code if you need details you can see all the examples in the example project that I will share the end of the article.
Examples
Adding/Removing elements to DOM
When you add remove/add new elements dom, means that when you change visibility with v-if
. You should add v-auto-animate
directive to parent of element that will be animated. This parent element should be always visible otherwise your animation may not run correctly.
<collapse v-auto-animate>
<header @click="toggleBody">
Header
</header>
<body v-if="isBodyVisible">
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit.
Donec posuere malesuada nulla, vitae congue metus rutrum ac.
Aliquam placerat metus consectetur nisi venenatis, eget tristique ligula consectetur.
Phasellus quis blandit nulla. Vestibulum tempus lectus elit, sit amet accumsan ligula
consectetur sit amet. Phasellus egestas, mi et dapibus pulvinar, ipsum augue vulputate
metus, vel suscipit nunc velit id tellus. Vestibulum viverra dolor non euismod malesuada.
</body>
</collapse>
https://res.cloudinary.com/djsydl9fh/image/upload/v1677937200/Articles/f1646cf2-8a86-4063-b405-d9fb659bb8c4_ljzss7.gif
Adding/Removing Item From the List
If you want to animate adding/removing items to list event, you should add v-auto-animate
directive to parent of the looped items. That way the library automatically understand changes and animate items when they added or deleted.
<section class="mt-10">
<div v-auto-animate>
<template v-for="item in items" :key="item.title">
<item />
</template>
</div>
<div>
<button @click="addNew"> Add New </button>
<button @click="removeRandom"> Remove random </button>
</div>
</section>
Change the Sorting of the List
I will use a randomizing function to change the order of list elements to avoid the complexity of changing elements one by one with a button. The animation will be same for both cases just this will little bit long for multi-index jumping.
Change Duration of Animation
With directive, you can easily override the duration of animation by passing config object to the directive shown below.
<div v-auto-animate="{ duration: 100 }" class="flex flex-col gap-2">
<template v-for="item in items" :key="item.title">
<item />
</template>
</div>
In this example, I override animation duration to 100
ms instead of default value(I don't know default value btw) with v-auto-animate="{ duration: 100 }"
code.
Tricky Animations
I would like to list some edge cases I faced with. Most of them are related to html rendering, Vue updates html elements little as possible so adding key
to the component forces them to re-render element completely that way they will animate while re-renderin occur.
- Sometimes you would like to animate your components when their text changes or image source changes but it will not automatically be detected by
auto-animations
so you should addkey
to your HTML element and addv-auto-animate
directive to the parent element of it. Then it will fade away with everykey
change. - If you would like to animate route change you should add unique key to your
<router-view />
component like this<router-view :key="$route.fullPath">
- Sometimes animation starts with under of other elements if that element doesn't have a background color(cause overlapping) or adds a scrollbar while the animation is running. If you want to prevent this, you should add
overflow-hidden
to the parent element. That way you don't see animations that occur outside of the element area.
More Examples
I just want to show you some basic things you can do with this library for other examples and use cases you can look at their documentation.
Creating Your Own Animation
Also, AutoAnimation
library gives an API to create your own animation or extend/change the default animations it comes with. I won't cover that part in this article but you can read for more details in the documentation.
In conclusion, you can animate all your applications with AutoAnimate
quickly and most importantly effortlessly. I shared all the details I know about AutoAnimate
. I hope you enjoyed. You can see the example codes with the link below.
Top comments (1)
This article is awesome. I enjoyed reading it.