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🍿 A cross-browser library of CSS animations. As easy to use as an easy thing.

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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.

Installation

To install via Bower, simply do the following:

$ bower install animate.css --save

or you can install via npm:

$ npm install animate.css --save

Basic Usage

  1. Include the stylesheet on your document's <head>
<head>
  <link rel="stylesheet" href="animate.min.css">
</head>

Instead of installing you may use the remote version (hosted by CDNJS):

<head>
  <link rel="stylesheet"
  href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/animate.css@3.5.2/animate.min.css">
  <!-- or -->
  <link rel="stylesheet"
  href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/animate.css/3.5.2/animate.min.css">
</head>

You may generate a SRI hash of that particular version and then use it to ensure the file's integrity; also you can make anonymous requests to CDN by setting the corresponding crossorigin attribute:

<head>
  <link rel="stylesheet"
  href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/animate.css@3.5.2/animate.min.css"
  integrity="sha384-OHBBOqpYHNsIqQy8hL1U+8OXf9hH6QRxi0+EODezv82DfnZoV7qoHAZDwMwEJvSw"
  crossorigin="anonymous">
  <!-- or -->
  <link rel="stylesheet"
  href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/animate.css/3.5.2/animate.min.css"
  integrity="sha384-OHBBOqpYHNsIqQy8hL1U+8OXf9hH6QRxi0+EODezv82DfnZoV7qoHAZDwMwEJvSw"
  crossorigin="anonymous">
</head>
  1. Add the class animated to the element you want to animate. You may also want to include the class infinite for an infinite loop.

  2. Finally you need to add one of the following classes:

Class Name
bounce flash pulse rubberBand
shake headShake swing tada
wobble jello bounceIn bounceInDown
bounceInLeft bounceInRight bounceInUp bounceOut
bounceOutDown bounceOutLeft bounceOutRight bounceOutUp
fadeIn fadeInDown fadeInDownBig fadeInLeft
fadeInLeftBig fadeInRight fadeInRightBig fadeInUp
fadeInUpBig fadeOut fadeOutDown fadeOutDownBig
fadeOutLeft fadeOutLeftBig fadeOutRight fadeOutRightBig
fadeOutUp fadeOutUpBig flipInX flipInY
flipOutX flipOutY lightSpeedIn lightSpeedOut
rotateIn rotateInDownLeft rotateInDownRight rotateInUpLeft
rotateInUpRight rotateOut rotateOutDownLeft rotateOutDownRight
rotateOutUpLeft rotateOutUpRight hinge jackInTheBox
rollIn rollOut zoomIn zoomInDown
zoomInLeft zoomInRight zoomInUp zoomOut
zoomOutDown zoomOutLeft zoomOutRight zoomOutUp
slideInDown slideInLeft slideInRight slideInUp
slideOutDown slideOutLeft slideOutRight slideOutUp
heartBeat

Full example:

<h1 class="animated infinite bounce delay-2s">Example</h1>

Check out all the animations here!

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!

<head>
  <link rel="stylesheet" href="animate.min.css">
</head>

or use the version hosted by CDNJS

<head>
  <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/animate.css/3.5.2/animate.min.css">
</head>

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:

$('#yourElement').addClass('animated bounceOutLeft');

You can also detect when an animation ends:

// See https://github.com/daneden/animate.css/issues/644
var animationEnd = (function(el) {
  var animations = {
    animation: 'animationend',
    OAnimation: 'oAnimationEnd',
    MozAnimation: 'mozAnimationEnd',
    WebkitAnimation: 'webkitAnimationEnd',
  };

  for (var t in animations) {
    if (el.style[t] !== undefined) {
      return animations[t];
    }
  }
})(document.createElement('div'));

$('#yourElement').one(animationEnd, doSomething);

View a video tutorial on how to use Animate.css with jQuery here.

Note: jQuery.one() is used when you want to execute the event handler at most once. More information here.

You can also extend jQuery to add a function that does it all for you:

$.fn.extend({
  animateCss: function(animationName, callback) {
    var animationEnd = (function(el) {
      var animations = {
        animation: 'animationend',
        OAnimation: 'oAnimationEnd',
        MozAnimation: 'mozAnimationEnd',
        WebkitAnimation: 'webkitAnimationEnd',
      };

      for (var t in animations) {
        if (el.style[t] !== undefined) {
          return animations[t];
        }
      }
    })(document.createElement('div'));

    this.addClass('animated ' + animationName).one(animationEnd, function() {
      $(this).removeClass('animated ' + animationName);

      if (typeof callback === 'function') callback();
    });

    return this;
  },
});

And use it like this:

$('#yourElement').animateCss('bounce');
or;
$('#yourElement').animateCss('bounce', function() {
  // Do somthing after animation
});

You can change the duration of your animations, add a delay or change the number of times that it plays:

.yourElement {
  animation-duration: 3s;
  animation-delay: 2s;
  animation-iteration-count: infinite;
}

Note: be sure to replace "vendor" in the CSS with the applicable vendor prefixes (webkit, moz, etc)

Define Delay and Speed using Class

Delay Class

You can also add delays directly on the element's class attribute, just like this:

<div class="animated bounce delay-2s">Example</div>
Class Name Delay Time
delay-2s 2s
delay-3s 3s
delay-4s 4s
delay-5s 5s

Note: The default delays are from 1 second to 5 seconds only. If you want to add customized delays, you can add it directly to your css

Slow, Slower, Fast, and Faster Class

You can control the speed of the animation by adding these classes, as a sample below:

<div class="animated bounce faster">Example</div>
Class Name Speed Time
slow 2s
slower 3s
fast 800ms
faster 500ms

Note: The default speed is 1s which is you don't need to put any class. If you want to add a custom duration, you can add it directly to your css instead

Custom Builds

Animate.css is powered by gulp.js, and you can create custom builds pretty easily. First of all, you’ll need Gulp and all other dependencies:

$ cd path/to/animate.css/
$ sudo npm install

Next, run gulp to compile your custom builds. For example, if you want only some of the “attention seekers”, simply edit the animate-config.json file to select only the animations you want to use.

"attention_seekers": {
  "bounce": true,
  "flash": false,
  "pulse": false,
  "shake": true,
  "headShake": true,
  "swing": true,
  "tada": true,
  "wobble": true,
  "jello":true
}

Accessibility

Animate.css supports the prefers-reduced-motion media query so that users with motion sensitivity can opt out of animations. On supported platforms (currently only OSX Safari and iOS Safari), users can select "reduce motion" on their operating system preferences and it will turn off CSS transitions for them without any further work required.

License

Animate.css is licensed under the MIT license. (http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)

Contributing

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. That last one is important.

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🍿 A cross-browser library of CSS animations. As easy to use as an easy thing.

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