npm install react-spring
Why 🤔
React-spring is a cooked down fork of Facebooks animated. It is trying to bridge it with Chenglou's React-motion because both have their pros and cons and could definitively benefit from one another:
| Declarative | Primitives | Interpolations | Performance |
---|
React-motion | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
Animated | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ |
React-spring | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
React-spring inherits react-motions api (and simplifies it), has lots of primitives (springs, trails, transitions, reveals, parallax), can interpolate mostly everything (colors, gradients, percentages, degrees, svg-paths, arrays, etc.) and last but not least, can animate by committing directly to the dom instead of re-rendering a component frame-by-frame.
Overview 🔭
import { Spring, Transition, Trail, Parallax } from 'react-spring'
Springs (Demo)
A Spring
will move data from one state to another. It remembers the current state, value changes are always fluid.
<Spring from={{ opacity: 0 }} to={{ opacity: 1 }}>
{styles => <div style={styles}>i will fade in</div>}
</Spring>
Mount/unmount Transitions (Demo)
Transition
watches elements as they mount and unmount, it helps you to animate these changes.
<Transition
keys={items.map(item => item.key)}
from={{ opacity: 0, height: 0 }}
enter={{ opacity: 1, height: 20 }}
leave={{ opacity: 0, height: 0 }}>
{items.map(item => styles => <li style={styles}>{item.text}</li>)}
</Transition>
2-state Reveals (Demo)
Given a single child instead of a list you can reveal components with it.
<Transition
from={{ opacity: 0 }}
enter={{ opacity: 1 }}
leave={{ opacity: 0 }}>
{toggle ? ComponentA : ComponentB}
</Transition>
Trails and staggered animations (Demo)
Trail
animates the first child of a list of elements, the rest follow the spring of their previous sibling.
<Trail from={{ opacity: 0 }} to={{ opacity: 1 }} keys={items.map(item => item.key)}>
{items.map(item => styles => <div style={styles}>{item.text}</div>)}
</Trail>
Parallax and page transitions (Demo)
Parallax
allows you to declaratively create page/scroll-based animations.
<Parallax pages={2}>
<Parallax.Layer offset={0} speed={0.2}>first Page</Parallax.Layer>
<Parallax.Layer offset={1} speed={0.5}>second Page</Parallax.Layer>
</Parallax>
API overview 📖
For a raw documentation of all possible properties look here.
Springs and interpolation
You can interpolate almost everything, from numbers, colors, svg-paths, percentages, arrays to string patterns:
<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',
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],
}}>
Render props
Don't like the way render props wrap your code?
const Header = ({ children, bold, ...styles }) => (
<h1 style={styles}>
{children}
</h1>
)
<Spring to={{ color: 'fuchsia' }} render={Header}>
{children}
</Spring>
Et voilà! Header
animates on prop changes! Props that Spring
doesn't recognize will be spread over the receiving component, including children
if you use render
to refer to the render-child.
Native rendering (Demo)
By default we'll render the receiving component every frame as it gives you more freedom to animate. In situations where that becomes expensive add the native
flag and animations will now be applied directly to the dom. The flag is available for all primitives (Spring, Transition & Trail, Parallax is native by design).
Just be aware of the following conditions:
- It only animates element styles and attributes, the values you receive are opaque objects, not regular values
- Receiving elements must be
animated.[elementName]
, for instance div
becomes animated.div
- If you need to interpolate styles use the
template
string literal
import { Spring, animated, template } from 'react-spring'
<Spring native to={{ path, rotate, scale }}>
{({ rotate, scale, path }) => (
<animated.svg style={{ transform: template`rotate(${rotate}) scale(${scale})` }}>
<g><animated.path d={path} /></g>
</animated.svg>
)}
</Spring>
Transitions
Animates children as they mount and unmount. from
denotes base styles, enter
styles are applied when objects appear, leave
styles are applied when objects disappear. Keys and children have to match in their order! The keys are the same that you would provide in any other looping situation.
import { Transition } from 'react-spring'
<ul>
<Transition
keys={items.map(item => item.key)}
from={{ opacity: 0, height: 0 }}
enter={{ opacity: 1, height: 20 }}
leave={{ opacity: 0, height: 0 }}>
{items.map(item => styles => <li style={styles}>{item.text}</li>)}
</Transition>
</ul>
You can use this prototype for two-state reveals, simply render a single child that you can switch out for another. You don't have to pass keys for this one.
<Transition
from={{ opacity: 0 }}
enter={{ opacity: 1 }}
leave={{ opacity: 0 }}>
{toggle ? ComponentA : ComponentB}
</Transition>
Trails/Staggered transitions
Trail
animates the first child of the list you pass, the others will follow in a trailing motion. The api is similar to Transition
though it will assume your list is fixed.
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>
Parallax and page transitions
Parallax
creates a scroll container. Throw in any amount of layers and it will take care of moving them in accordance to their offsets and speeds.
Parallax.pages
determines the total space of the inner content where each page takes 100% of the visible container. Layer.offset
determines where the layer will be at when scrolled to (0=start, 1=1st page, ...). Layer.speed
shifts the layer in accordance to its offset, values can be positive or negative.
import { Parallax } from 'react-spring'
<Parallax pages={3} scrolling={false} horizontal ref={ref => this.parallax = ref}>
<Parallax.Layer offset={0} speed={0.5}>
<span onClick={() => this.parallax.scrollTo(1)}>
Layers can contain anything
</span>
</Parallax.Layer>
</Parallax>
API | Changelog