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@elbstack/react-spring
Advanced tools
npm install react-spring
// React-dom
import { Spring, ... } from 'react-spring'
// React-native
import { Spring, ... } from 'react-spring/dist/native'
// Any other target or platform
import { Spring, ... } from 'react-spring/dist/universal'
A set of simple, spring-physics based primitives (as in building blocks) that should cover most of your UI related animation needs once plain CSS can't cope any longer. Forget easings, durations, timeouts and so on as you fluidly move data from one state to another. This isn't meant to solve each and every problem but rather to give you tools flexible enough to confidently cast ideas into moving interfaces.
react-spring is a cooked down fork of Christopher Chedeau's animated (which is used in react-native by default). It is trying to bridge it with Cheng Lou's react-motion. Although both are similarily spring-physics based they are still polar opposites.
Declarative | Primitives | Interpolations | Performance | |
---|---|---|---|---|
React-motion | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
Animated | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ |
React-spring | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
react-spring builds upon animated's foundation, making it leaner and more flexible. It inherits react-motions declarative api and goes to great lengths to simplify it. It has lots of useful primitives, can interpolate mostly everything and last but not least, can animate by committing directly to the dom instead of re-rendering a component frame-by-frame.
For a more detailed explanation read Why React needed yet another animation library.
Click for a combined example repository you can install as well as a collection of code-sandboxes to toy around with online.
If you ever plan to use this library, this should be a must-read. It will go a little deeper into the primitives and how native
rendering can make a large performance impact.
For annotated prop-types, good for finding out about all the obscure props that i don't want to bore you with (but which might come in handy, you never know).
A Spring
will move data from one state to another. It remembers the current state, value changes are always fluid.
import { Spring } from 'react-spring'
<Spring from={{ opacity: 0 }} to={{ opacity: 1 }}>
{styles => <div style={styles}>i will fade in</div>}
</Spring>
Transition
watches elements as they mount and unmount, it helps you to animate these changes.
import { Transition } from 'react-spring'
<Transition
keys={items.map(item => item.key)}
from={{ opacity: 0, height: 0 }}
enter={{ opacity: 1, height: 20 }}
leave={{ opacity: 0, height: 0, pointerEvents: 'none' }}>
{items.map(item => styles => <li style={styles}>{item.text}</li>)}
</Transition>
Given a single child instead of a list you can toggle between two components.
import { Transition } from 'react-spring'
<Transition from={{ opacity: 0 }} enter={{ opacity: 1 }} leave={{ opacity: 0 }}>
{toggle
? styles => <div style={styles}>Component A</div>
: styles => <div style={styles}>Component B</div>
}
</Transition>
If you need to toggle a single child, that is also possible.
import { Transition } from 'react-spring'
<Transition from={{ opacity: 0 }} enter={{ opacity: 1 }} leave={{ opacity: 0 }}>
{visible && (styles => <div style={styles}>Single Component</div>)}
</Transition>
Trail
animates the first child of a list of elements, the rest follow the spring of their previous sibling.
import { Trail } from 'react-spring'
<Trail from={{ opacity: 0 }} to={{ opacity: 1 }} keys={items.map(item => item.key)}>
{items.map(item => styles => <div style={styles}>{item.text}</div>)}
</Trail>
Keyframes
allow you to chain, compose and orchestrate animations by creating predefined slots. The resulting primitive behaves like the primitive it stems from, it can receive all generic properties like native
or from
, etc. You make it animate by passing the state
props, which receives the named slot.
import { Keyframes, config } from 'react-spring'
// You can create keyframes for springs, trails and transitions
const Container = Keyframes.Spring({
// Single props
show: { to: { opacity: 1 } },
// Chained animations (arrays)
showAndHide: [ { to: { opacity: 1 } }, { to: { opacity: 0 } }],
// Functions with side-effects
wiggle: async call => {
await call({ to: { x: 100 }, config: config.wobbly })
await delay(1000)
await call({ to: { x: 0 }, config: config.gentle })
}
})
<Container state="show">
{styles => <div style={styles}>Hello</div>}
</Container>
Parallax
allows you to declaratively create page/scroll-based animations.
import { Parallax, ParallaxLayer } from 'react-spring'
<Parallax pages={2}>
<ParallaxLayer offset={0} speed={0.2}>
first Page
</ParallaxLayer>
<ParallaxLayer offset={1} speed={0.5}>
second Page
</ParallaxLayer>
</Parallax>
You'll find varying implementations under /dist/addons. For now there's a time-based animation as well common easings, and IOS'es harmonic oscillator spring. All primitives understand the impl
property which you can use to switch implementations.
import { TimingAnimation, Easing } from 'react-spring/dist/addons'
<Spring impl={TimingAnimation} config={{ duration: 1000, easing: Easing.linear }} ...>
You can interpolate almost everything, from numbers, colors (names, rgb, rgba, hsl, hsla), paths (as long as the number of points match, otherwise use custom interpolation), percentages, units, arrays and string patterns. You can also set non-animatable string values and even auto
is valid.
<Spring to={{
scale: toggle ? 1 : 2,
start: toggle ? '#abc' : 'rgb(10,20,30)',
end: toggle ? 'seagreen' : 'rgba(0,0,0,0.5)',
stop: toggle ? '0%' : '50%',
rotate: toggle ? '0deg' : '45deg',
shadow: toggle ? '0 2px 2px 0px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.12)' : '0 20px 20px 0px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5)',
path: toggle ? 'M20,380 L380,380 L380,380 Z' : 'M20,20 L20,380 L380,380 Z',
vector: toggle ? [1,2,50,100] : [20,30,1,-100],
pointerEvents: toggle ? 'all' : 'none',
height: toggle ? 'auto' : 0,
}}>
The Api is driven by render props. We offer both render
and children
as well as prop forwardwing (unrecognized props will be spread over the receiving component). You can use it like always (all the above examples), or in various patterns, for instance higher-order-render-props:
const Header = ({ children, bold, ...styles }) => (
<h1 style={styles}>
{bold ? <b>{children}</b> : children}
</h1>
)
<Spring render={Header} to={{ color: this.state.color }} bold={this.state.bold}>
hello there
</Spring>
Most libs animate by having React recalculate the component-tree on every frame. Here it attempts to animate a component consisting of ~300 sub-components, plowing through the frame budget and causing jank. | React-spring with the native property renders the component only once, from then on the animation will be applied directly to the dom in a requestAnimationFrame-loop, similar to how gsap and d3 do it. |
import { Spring, animated } from 'react-spring'
<Spring native from={{ opacity: 0 }} to={{ opacity: 1 }}>
{styles => <animated.div style={styles}>i will fade in</animated.div>}
</Spring>
Native rendering comes with a few caveats you should know about before using it, more about that here. Try going native in all situations where you can, the benefits are worth it!
The default export points to react-dom. If you want to animate react-native refer to /dist/native
, and /dist/universal
for any other target. Each target defines platform specific constants (colors, units, etc.). The universal target is the least specific.
In react-native you can still use the native
keyword for more performance, create your own animated-components by calling into the animated
function.
import { Spring, animated } from 'react-spring/dist/native'
import { View } from 'react-native'
const AnimatedView = animated(View)
<Spring native from={{ opacity: 0 }} to={{ opacity: 1 }}>
{styles => <AnimatedView style={styles} />}
</Spring>
This project exists thanks to all the people who contribute.
Thank you to all our backers! 🙏 [Become a backer]
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FAQs
Animate React with ease
The npm package @elbstack/react-spring receives a total of 1 weekly downloads. As such, @elbstack/react-spring popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @elbstack/react-spring demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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