Without the transition, transform property is able just to turn over the object it is applied to. So, in the most real-life situations (real-life?), these two options are applied together.
Just Transform
Powers which this property posses are:
- rotate(angle),
- skew(angle),
- translate(x,y),
- scale(x,y),
- matrix(n,n,n,n,n,n).
All values are pretty self-explainable except maybe the matrix.
rotate
and skew
options use angle degree values (values can be negative and you can type more than 360, such as 1080deg, for three full rotations).
The translate
option uses px
or %
.
The scale
option uses just numbers and they define how much the object is going to increase/decrease according to parameters given to the width and height.
All of these properties accept the matrix (which is still maybe not self-explained) have special options with X and Y added to syntax in which case, just one parameter is needed and property in rotate
and skew
cases, becomes relative to x or y-axis (e.g. translateX(), scaleY()...).
The matrix
option does EVERYTHING (did you expect less?). The exact syntax is matrix(scaleX(),skewY(),skewX(),scaleY(),translateX(),translateY())
. Even thought there is no rotate option inside, it is shown to me that it can rotate too. I can't say more that this (because it's math...something...function...something). Check this post for more.
It's also possible to combine multiple transforms by defining them under one transform.
div {
transform: rotate(90deg) scale(2) translateY(-50%) translateX(50%);
}
The most popular effect that this property is used for recently, is rotating navigation, social and other information on left side mostly, and making them vertical. For both examples down below is used transform: rotate(-90deg)
property.
3D Transform
2D property values rotate
, translate
, scale
and matrix
have its parallel 3D values with z-axis added. Extra 3D property is perspective
which defines a perspective view for a 3D transformed element. Perspective
uses one value which defines how far the element is placed from the view.
- rotate3d(x,y,z,angle),
- translate3d(x,y,z),
- scale3d(x,y,z),
- matrix3d(n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n),
- perspective(n).
I believe that all those are really self-explained after we understood 2D options.
Transition + Transform
The transform
property is used for defining the transition between two states of an element. With the transition
, they make a powerful couple, as mentioned at the beginning.
.box {
...
background-color: #0000FF;
-webkit-transition:background-color 2s, -webkit-transform 2s;
transition:background-color 2s, transform 2s;
}
.box:hover {
background-color: #FFCCCC;
-webkit-transform: rotate(180deg);
transform: rotate(180deg);
}
This kind of combination is the most common usage of both, transform
and transition
property. It's important to remember to define transition in the first state with transform as value and to define transform in the second state.
Final Word
Shake those straight elements of yours!
This post is originally posted on Kolosek Blog.
Top comments (1)
Interesting.. I might experimenting with my side project,Kudos as always. I love all your hard work.
~Cheers ❤