This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.
The setKeyframes()
method of the KeyframeEffect
interface replaces the keyframes that make up the affected KeyframeEffect
with a new set of keyframes.
existingKeyframeEffect.setKeyframes(keyframes);
null
. If set to null
, the keyframes are replaced with a sequence of empty keyframes.There are two different ways to format keyframes:
An array
of objects (keyframes) consisting of properties and values to iterate over. This is the canonical format returned by the getKeyframes()
method.
element.animate([ { // from opacity: 0, color: "#fff" }, { // to opacity: 1, color: "#000" } ], 2000);
Offsets for each keyframe can be specified by providing an offset
value.
element.animate([ { opacity: 1 }, { opacity: 0.1, offset: 0.7 }, { opacity: 0 } ], 2000);
Note: offset
values, if provided, must be between 0.0 and 1.0 (inclusive) and arranged in ascending order.
It is not necessary to specify an offset for every keyframe. Keyframes without a specified offset will be evenly spaced between adjacent keyframes.
The easing to apply between keyframes can be specified by providing an easing
value as illustrated below.
element.animate([ { opacity: 1, easing: 'ease-out' }, { opacity: 0.1, easing: 'ease-in' }, { opacity: 0 } ], 2000);
In this example, the specified easing only applies from the keyframe where it is specified until the next keyframe. Any easing
value specified on the options
argument, however, applies across a single iteration of the animation — for the entire duration.
An object
containing key-value pairs consisting of the property to animate and an array
of values to iterate over.
element.animate({ opacity: [ 0, 1 ], // [ from, to ] color: [ "#fff", "#000" ] // [ from, to ] }, 2000);
Using this format, the number of elements in each array does not need to be equal. The provided values will be spaced out independently.
element.animate({ opacity: [ 0, 1 ], // offset: 0, 1 backgroundColor: [ "red", "yellow", "green" ], // offset: 0, 0.5, 1 }, 2000);
The special keys offset
, easing
, and composite
(described below) may be specified alongside the property values.
element.animate({ opacity: [ 0, 0.9, 1 ], offset: [ 0, 0.8 ], // Shorthand for [ 0, 0.8, 1 ] easing: [ 'ease-in', 'ease-out' ], }, 2000);
After generating a suitable set of keyframes from the property value lists, each supplied offset is applied to the corresponding keyframe. If there are insufficient values, or if the list contains null
values, the keyframes without specified offsets will be evenly spaced as with the array format described above.
If there are too few easing
or composite
values, the corresponding list will be repeated as needed.
Keyframes may specify property-value pairs for any of the animatable CSS properties. The property names are specified using camel-case so for example background-color
becomes backgroundColor
and background-position-x
becomes backgroundPositionX
. Shorthand values such as margin
are also permitted.
Two exceptional CSS properties are:
float
, which must be written as cssFloat
since "float" is a reserved word in JavaScriptoffset
, which must be written as cssOffset
since "offset" represents the keyframe offset as described below.The following special attributes may also be specified:
The offset of the keyframe specified as a number between 0.0
and 1.0
inclusive or null
. This is equivalent to specifying start and end states in percentages in CSS stylesheets using @keyframes
. If this value is null
or missing, the keyframe will be evenly spaced between adjacent keyframes.
The timing function used from this keyframe until the next keyframe in the series.
The KeyframeEffect.composite
operation used to combine the values specified in this keyframe with the underlying value. This will be auto
if the composite operation specified on the effect is being used.
Void.
Exception | Explanation |
---|---|
TypeError | One or more of the frames were not of the correct type of object, the keyframes were not loosely sorted by offset, or a keyframe existed with an offset of less than 0 or more than 1. |
Note: If the keyframes cannot be processed or are malformed, the KeyframeEffect
's keyframes are not modified.
// passing an array of keyframe objects existingKeyframeEffect.setKeyframes( [ { color: 'blue' }, { color: 'green', left: '10px' } ] ); // passing an object with arrays for values existingKeyframeEffect.setKeyframes( { color: ['blue', 'green'], left: [ '0', '10px'] } ); // passing a single-member object existingKeyframeEffect.setKeyframes( { color: 'blue' } );
Specification | Status | Comment |
---|---|---|
Web Animations The definition of 'KeyframeEffect.setKeyframes()' in that specification. | Working Draft | Editor's draft. |
Desktop | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chrome | Edge | Firefox | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari | |
Basic support | No | No | 63 | No | No | No |
Mobile | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Android webview | Chrome for Android | Edge Mobile | Firefox for Android | Opera for Android | iOS Safari | Samsung Internet | |
Basic support | No | No | No | 63 | No | No | No |
© 2005–2018 Mozilla Developer Network and individual contributors.
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/KeyframeEffect/setKeyframes