animate.css/docsSource/sections/04-javascript.md
2020-06-19 16:11:26 +01:00

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Usage with Javascript

You can do a whole bunch of other stuff with animate.css when you combine it with Javascript. A simple example:

const element = document.querySelector('.my-element');
element.classList.add('animate__animated', 'animate__bounceOutLeft');

You can detect when an animation ends:

const element = document.querySelector('.my-element');
element.classList.add('animate__animated', 'animate__bounceOutLeft');

element.addEventListener('animationend', () => {
  // do something
});

or change its duration:

const element = document.querySelector('.my-element');
element.style.setProperty('--animate-duration', '0.5s');

You can also use a simple function to add the animations classes and remove them automatically:

const animateCSS = (element, animation, prefix = 'animate__') =>
  // We create a Promise and return it
  new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    const animationName = `${prefix}${animation}`;
    const node = document.querySelector(element);

    node.classList.add(`${prefix}animated`, animationName);

    // When the animation ends, we clean the classes and resolve the Promise
    function handleAnimationEnd() {
      node.classList.remove(`${prefix}animated`, animationName);
      node.removeEventListener('animationend', handleAnimationEnd);

      resolve('Animation ended');
    }

    node.addEventListener('animationend', handleAnimationEnd);
  });

And use it like this:

animateCSS('.my-element', 'bounce');

// or
animateCSS('.my-element', 'bounce').then((message) => {
  // Do something after the animation
});

If you had a hard time understanding the previous function, have a look at const, classList, arrow functions, and Promises.