First of all I want to mention two things,
One: My code isn't perfect (esspechially the eval parts) - but I wanted to try something for my self, and see if I could duplicate the jQuery Animation function, so please forgive my "bad" practices, and please don't suggest that I'll use jQuery, I wanted to experiment.
Two: This code isn't done yet, and I just wanted to figure out what makes it work badly.
So the animation runs for about 12 seconds while the duration parameter I entered was 15 seconds, What am I doing wrong?
function animate(elem, attr, duration){
if(attr.constructor === Object){//check for object literal
var i = 0;
var cssProp = [];
var cssValue = [];
for(key in attr) {
cssProp[i] = key;
cssValue[i] = attr[key];
}
var fps = (1000 / 60);
var t = setInterval(function(){
for(var j=0;j<cssProp.length;j++){
if(document.getElementById(elem).style[cssProp[j]].length == 0){
//asign basic value in css if the object dosn't have one.
document.getElementById(elem).style[cssProp[j]]= 0;
}
var c = document.getElementById(elem).style[cssProp[j]];
//console.log(str +" | "+c+"|"+cssValue[j]);
if(c > cssValue[j]){
document.getElementById(elem).style[cssProp[j]] -= 1/((duration/fps)*(c-cssValue[j]));
}else if(c < cssValue[j]){
document.getElementById(elem).style[cssProp[j]] += 1/((duration/fps)*(c-cssValue[j]));
}else if(c == cssValue[j]){
window.clearInterval(t);
}
}
},fps);
}
}
animate('hello',{opacity:0},15000);
html:
<p id="hello" style="opacity:1;">Hello World</p>
Note: I guess there is a problem with the
(duration/fps)*(c-cssValue[j])
Part or/and the interval of the setInterval (fps variable).
Thanks in advance.
var style = document.getElementById(elem).style[cssProp[j]];
instead of that ugly str building.eval
is going to be so incredibly painful. Clean that up first... As a reminder,eval("foo("+str+")")
is the same asfoo(str)
. Andeval("obj."+ propName)
is the same asobj[propName]
. Those two rules should allow to rip out nearly every eval there.k
? It's not declared or set anywhere in this snippet. And given that it's part of the tween calculation that seems important.