Transition Hidden Element
A JavaScript utility to help you use CSS transitions when showing and hiding elements with the
hiddenattribute ordisplay: none;.
- An example showing this library in action.
- A more complex example showing using this library with staggered child transitions and toggling.
To properly hide elements from all users including screen reader users, elements should be hidden using the hidden attribute or display: none;. However, this prevents elements from being transitioned with CSS. If you'd like to use CSS transitions to show and hide these elements you'll need to use JavaScript to do so. This utility wraps that JavaScript into a small, easy-to-use module.
I also wrote a blog post going into more detail about why this was created and how it works.
To allow transitions when showing an element the utility performs a few steps:
- Remove the
hiddenattribute (ordisplay: none;). - Trigger a browser reflow.
- Apply a class to trigger the transition(s).
To allow transitions when hiding an element the utility performs a few steps:
- Remove a class to trigger the transition(s).
- Wait for the transition to complete, or wait for a timeout to complete. (Depending on initialization settings.)
- Add the
hiddenattribute (ordisplay: none;).
This library can be used to show or hide an element with transitioned children. For example, when opening a menu, each child link may animate in one-by-one in a staggered fashion. This utility includes API options to support this use case.
Animation can cause health consequences for some users and they may prefer reduced motion. If a user's OS settings signal they prefer reduced motion you should disable your CSS transitions:
@media (prefers-reduced-motion: reduce) {
* {
transition: none !important;
}
}First, install the package from npm:
npm i @cloudfour/transition-hidden-element --save
Then you can get started. Here's a simple example showing importing the module, initializing a menu, and then showing and hiding it based on user interaction:
// Import our dependency
import { transitionHiddenElement } from '@cloudfour/transition-hidden-element';
// Initialize our menu
const menuTransitioner = transitionHiddenElement({
element: document.querySelector('#menu'),
visibleClass: 'is-open',
});
document.querySelector('#open-menu-button').addEventListener('click', () => {
menuTransitioner.show();
});
document.querySelector('#close-menu-button').addEventListener('click', () => {
menuTransitioner.close();
});When initializing transitionHiddenElement, there are two required parameters and four optional parameters:
const simpleFader = transitionHiddenElement({
element: document.querySelector('.js-simple-fade'), // Required
visibleClass: 'is-shown', // Required
waitMode: 'transitionend', // Optional — defaults to `'transitionend'`
timeoutDuration: null // Optional — defaults to `null`
hideMode: 'hidden', // Optional — defaults to `'hidden'`
displayValue: null // Optional — defaults to `'block'`
});element should be the primary element we're showing and hiding. It will be the element that we'll be adding and removing classes and the hidden attribute (or display: none;) from.
visibleClass is the class that will be added when showing our element. Adding the class should trigger a transition on our element or its child elements.
waitMode determines when the utility should re-apply the hidden attribute (or display: none;) when hiding. It defaults to transitionend but has a few options:
transitionend— Wait for theelement'stransitionendevent to fire. This works if the element has a transition that will be triggered by removing thevisibleClass.timeout— Wait a certain number of milliseconds. This is useful when yourelementis not the only element transitioning. For example, if removing yourvisibleClasstriggers transitions on child elements, then you should use this option. When using this option be sure to pass in a number for thetimeoutDurationparameter.immediate— Don't wait at all.
Regardless of which setting you choose, it will be converted to immediate if a user's OS settings signal they prefer reduced motion. You should disable other transitions in your CSS for these users as mentioned above.
When using the timeout option for waitMode you should be sure to pass in the length of the timeout in milliseconds.
hideMode determines whether elements are hidden by applying the hidden attribute, or using CSS's display: none;. It has two options:
hidden— use thehiddenattribute (this is the default)display— use CSS'sdisplay: none;
When using the display option for hideMode, this option determines what display should be set to when showing elements. e.g. block, inline, inline-block, etc.
After initializing your transitionHiddenElement it will return an object with a few methods.
Shows your element. Removes hidden (or display: none;), triggers a document reflow, and applies your visibleClass.
Hides your element. Removes your visibleClass and adds hidden (or display: none;).
Toggles the visibility of your element. Shows it if it's hidden and hides it if it's visible.
isHidden()
Returns the current hidden status of your element. It returns true if the element has the hidden attribute, is display: none; or is missing the visibleClass.
Feel free to fork the repo and submit a PR with any helpful additions or changes. After cloning the repository run the following commands:
npm i— Install dependenciesnpm start- Build and serve a demo server with hot reloading.- View the demo server at
localhost:3000
Testing is done in the browser using Cypress, since virtual DOM libraries like jsdom don't handle transitions well.
In order to run the tests do the following:
npm start— launch the servernpm test— launch Cypress
Tests will also automatically be run when pull requests are created.