Note: If you are just looking for Dan Eden's Animate.css ported to Compass, I recommend my newer compass-animate plugin. This plugin is mainly for adding animations to older versions of Compass.
First and foremost, this plugin gives you all the tools you need to write and apply css3 animations in compass. As a bonus, and only if you so choose, it also supplies you with a "shit-ton" (roughly 2 metric tons) of pre-fabricated animations taken from Dan Eden's "Animate.css" project.
This plugin requires Sass 3.2 and Compass 0.12
gem install animation --pre
require 'animation'
@import "animation";
The default import only includes the core mixins for creating animations. That covers all the expected properties, to be used exactly as you would in CSS:
// create your animation
@include keyframes($name) {
@content;
}
// apply animation(s) and adjust settings
@include animation-name([$name-1, $name-2, ..., $name-10]);
@include animation-duration([$duration-1, $duration-2, ..., $duration-10]);
@include animation-delay([$delay-1, $delay-2, ..., $delay-10]);
@include animation-timing-function([$function-1, $function-2, ..., $function-10]);
@include animation-iteration-count([$count-1, $count-2, ..., $count-10]);
@include animation-direction([$direction-1, $direction-2, ..., $direction-10]);
@include animation-fill-mode([$mode-1, $mode-2, ..., $mode-10]);
@include animation-play-state([$state-1, $state-2, ..., $state-10]);
// shortcut to apply and adjust
@include animation([$animation-1, $animation-2, ..., animation-10]);
There are default variables available for all of them:
$default-animation-name : false;
$default-animation-duration : false;
$default-animation-delay : false;
$default-animation-timing-function : false;
$default-animation-iteration-count : false;
$default-animation-direction : false;
$default-animation-fill-mode : false;
$default-animation-play-state : false;
Say you want to create your own animation. Start with the keyframes:
@include keyframes(my-animation) {
0%, 100% {
background-color: blue;
}
50% {
background-color: red;
}
}
That animation will change the background color from blue to red to blue again. Now let's apply it to something:
body {
@include animation(my-animation 10s infinite);
}
Compare that to the official CSS spec:
@include keyframes my-animation {
0%, 100% {
background-color: blue;
}
50% {
background-color: red;
}
}
body {
animation: my-animation 10s infinite;
}
Pretty much identical. You're just using include/argument pairs instead of property/value pairs.
Because the Animate code creates output, you need to import it (or one of it's sob-modules) directly:
@import "animation/animate";
That will create the following named animations:
- Attention seekers
- flash, bounce, shake, tada, swing, wobble, wiggle, pulse
- Flippers (currently Webkit, Firefox, & IE10 only)
- flip, flipInX, flipOutX, flipInY, flipOutY
- Fading entrances
- fadeIn, fadeInUp, fadeInDown, fadeInLeft, fadeInRight, fadeInUpBig, fadeInDownBig, fadeInLeftBig, fadeInRightBig
- Fading exits
- fadeOut, fadeOutUp, fadeOutDown, fadeOutLeft, fadeOutRight, fadeOutUpBig, fadeOutDownBig, fadeOutLeftBig, fadeOutRightBig
- Bouncing entrances
- bounceIn, bounceInDown, bounceInUp, bounceInLeft, bounceInRight
- Bouncing exits
- bounceOut, bounceOutDown, bounceOutUp, bounceOutLeft, bounceOutRight
- Rotating entrances
- rotateIn, rotateInDownLeft, rotateInDownRight, rotateInUpLeft, rotateInUpRight
- Rotating exits
- rotateOut, rotateOutDownLeft, rotateOutDownRight, rotateOutUpLeft, rotateOutUpRight
- Lightspeed
- lightSpeedIn, lightSpeedOut
- Specials
- hinge, rollIn, rollOut
You can use them like this:
.widget {
@include animation(fadeIn);
}
You can also import a set of predefined classes for each animation:
@import "animation/animate/classes";
With those classes imported,
you can simply add the class of fadeIn
to any element,
and watch it do the magic.
That's all there is to it.