I want to create a carousel with a sliding effect as seen on http://www.mtv.com/, where if the user clicks on the slide, a new slide appears from the right and moves leftward. How can I do this?
1 Answer
Personally, I do this with CSS.
<div class="slider">
<div>Content area 1</div>
<div>Content area 2</div>
<div>Content area 3</div>
</div>
CSS:
.slider {
white-space: nowrap;
oveflow:hidden;
}
.slider>div {
white-space: normal; /* reset "nowrap" above */
display: inline-block;
width: 100%;
transition: margin-left 0.8s cubic-bezier(0.5, 0.1, 0.5, 1.25);
/* the above transition gives a neat little "bounce-back" effect */
}
Then my JavaScript can just do:
theSlider.children[0].style.marginLeft = (-100*pageID)+"%";
// so 0% to view the first panel, 100% for the second, etc.
Side-note: The spaces between the elements will mess up alignment. Either put all your <div>
content panels on one line (or, more specifically, make sure you do </div><div>
between panels with no space), or use JS to strip out the spaces between elements.
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why is there a ">" in .slider>div? I've never seen that notation before. Also, not sure why you have an array of children and pageID is a variable that iterates through the slides Feb 20, 2014 at 12:22
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@user3308889 It astonishes me how many people have "never heard of" something so simple as the "child combinator"... It basically means it only affects the
<div>
s that are immediately inside the.slider
, but NOT any deeper-nested<div>
s (for instance, if one of the slider panels contains a<div>
somewhere in it) Feb 20, 2014 at 13:36