8

I am working on fadein and fadeout functions using pure javascript, here is the code:

(function() {
    var fx = {
        easing: {
            linear: function(progress) {
                return progress;
            },
            quadratic: function(progress) {
                return Math.pow(progress, 2);
            },
            swing: function(progress) {
                return 0.5 - Math.cos(progress * Math.PI) / 2;
            },
            circ: function(progress) {
                return 1 - Math.sin(Math.acos(progress));
            },
            back: function(progress, x) {
                return Math.pow(progress, 2) * ((x + 1) * progress - x);
            },
            bounce: function(progress) {
                for (var a = 0, b = 1, result; 1; a += b, b /= 2) {
                    if (progress >= (7 - 4 * a) / 11) {
                        return -Math.pow((11 - 6 * a - 11 * progress) / 4, 2) + Math.pow(b, 2);
                    }
                }
            },
            elastic: function(progress, x) {
                return Math.pow(2, 10 * (progress - 1)) * Math.cos(20 * Math.PI * x / 3 * progress);
            }
        },
        animate: function(options) {
            var start = new Date;
            var id = setInterval(function() {
                var timePassed = new Date - start;
                var progress = timePassed / options.duration;
                if (progress > 1) {
                    progress = 1;
                }
                options.progress = progress;
                var delta = options.delta(progress);
                options.step(delta);
                if (progress == 1) {
                    clearInterval(id);
                    options.complete();
                }
            }, options.delay || 10);
        },
        fadeOut: function(element, options) {
            var to = 1;
            this.animate({
                duration: options.duration,
                delta: function(progress) {
                    progress = this.progress;
                    return fx.easing.swing(progress);
                },
                complete: options.complete,
                step: function(delta) {
                    element.style.opacity = to - delta;
                }
            });
        },
        fadeIn: function(element, options) {
            var to = 0;
            this.animate({
                duration: options.duration,
                delta: function(progress) {
                    progress = this.progress;
                    return fx.easing.swing(progress);
                },
                complete: options.complete,
                step: function(delta) {
                    element.style.opacity = to + delta;
                }
            });
        }
    };
    window.fx = fx;
})()

I am using the following code to activate the function:

document.getElementById('in').addEventListener('click', function() {
    FX.fadeIn(document.getElementById('type'), {
        duration: 2000,
    });
}, false);

But when I load the page I get an error with the activation code.

Does anyone know what I have done wrong?

Thank you so much.

8
  • 10
    Your global fx object is called fx but you are trying to call FX. That probably doesn't help. Oct 9, 2013 at 12:47
  • 3
    Is there a good reason as to why you are trying to basically re-invent part of jQuery?
    – Nunners
    Oct 9, 2013 at 12:48
  • @Nunners I like doing things myself, I could use jQuery but this way I have a challenge.
    – user2847819
    Oct 9, 2013 at 12:53
  • @Nunners I bet jQuery wasn't the first one doing this but reinvented from another. There could be many good reasons to (re)implement this functionality: for a challenge, for performance... Who cares?
    – Carlos
    Oct 9, 2013 at 13:10
  • @jackflash I wasn't disputing that, I was just curious as to what his motive was behind doing this and not using something that has this functionality and is in wide-spread use. I now understand why he wanted to do it and accept that :)
    – Nunners
    Oct 9, 2013 at 13:14

1 Answer 1

11
+25

With a few adjustments, your code should work fine...

  1. As Richard Dalton noticed, call the object with fx not FX.
  2. Add default values for all options in case an option isn't provided (your example code throws an error because options.complete is undefined). Example:

    this.animate({
        duration: options.duration || 1000,
        ...
        complete: options.complete || function() { },
        ...
    });
    
  3. Adjust the styles before animating (imagine an element is hidden using display: none instead of opacity: 0)... Example (for fadeIn):

    element.style.opacity = 0;
    element.style.visibility = "visible";
    element.style.display = "block";
    
  4. Check if an action is needed at all (e.g. call to fadeIn despite element already being visible):

    isVisible: function(element) {
        return element.style.display !== "none" && 
                element.style.visibility !== "hidden" && 
                element.style.opacity !== "0";
    }
    
    // In fadeIn:
    if (!this.isVisible(element)) {
        ...
    }
    

Here's the corrected code with an example: JSFiddle

Certainly one could tweak this a little further, deal with some corner cases (e.g. what happens if there is a call to fadeIn while the element is currently being faded out?), and I'm pretty sure it doesn't work in all browsers (old IEs)... But I hope I pointed you in the right direction. :)

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