animate.css/README.md

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#Animate.css
*Just-add-water CSS animation*
`animate.css` is a bunch of cool, fun, and cross-browser animations for you to use in your projects. Great for emphasis, home pages, sliders, and general just-add-water-awesomeness.
##Usage
To use animate.css in your website, simply drop the stylesheet into your document's `<head>`, and add the class `animated` to an element, along with any of the animation names. That's it! You've got a CSS animated element. Super!
```html
<head>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="animate.min.css">
</head>
```
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You can do a whole bunch of other stuff with animate.css when you combine it with jQuery or add your own CSS rules. Dynamically add animations using jQuery with ease:
```javascript
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$('#yourElement').addClass('animated bounceOutLeft');
```
You can also detect when an animation ends:
```javascript
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$('#yourElement').one('webkitAnimationEnd mozAnimationEnd MSAnimationEnd oanimationend animationend', doSomething());
```
You can change the duration of your animations, add a delay or change the number of times that it plays:
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```css
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#yourElement {
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-vendor-animation-duration: 3s;
-vendor-animation-delay: 2s;
-vendor-animation-iteration-count: infinite;
}
```
*Note: be sure to replace "vendor" in the CSS with the applicable vendor prefixes (webkit, moz, etc)*
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## Custom Builds
Animate.css is powered by [Grunt](http://gruntjs.com), and you can create custom builds pretty easily. First of all, youll need Grunt and all other dependencies:
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```sh
$ cd path/to/animate.css/
$ sudo npm install
```
Next, run `grunt watch` to watch for changes and compile your custom builds. For example, if you want only some of the the “attention seekers”, simply edit the `.animate-config.json` file to select only the animations you want to use.
```javascript
"attention_seekers": {
"bounce": true,
"flash": false,
"pulse": false,
"shake": true,
"swing": true,
"tada": true,
"wobble": true
}
```
## License
Animate.css is licensed under the MIT license. (http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
## Contributing
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Pull requests are the way to go here. I apologise in advance for the slow action on pull requests and issues. I only have two rules for submitting a pull request: match the naming convention (camelCase, categorised [fades, bounces, etc]) and let us see a demo of submitted animations in a [pen](http://codepen.io). That last one is important.