vote up 3 vote down star
1

So this might be really simple, but I haven't been able to find any examples to learn off of yet, so please bear with me. ;)

Here's basically what I want to do:

<div>Lots of content! Lots of content! Lots of content! ...</div>

.... 

$("div").html("Itsy-bitsy bit of content!");

I want to smoothly animate between the dimensions of the div with lots of content to the dimensions of the div with very little when the new content is injected.

Thoughts?

flag

5 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

Try this jQuery plugin:

// Animates the dimensional changes resulting from altering element contents
// Usage examples: 
//    $("#myElement").showHtml("new HTML contents");
//    $("div").showHtml("new HTML contents", 400);
//    $(".className").showHtml("new HTML contents", 400, 
//                    function() {/* on completion */});
(function($)
{
   $.fn.showHtml = function(html, speed, callback)
   {
      return this.each(function()
      {
         // The element to be modified
         var el = $(this);

         // Preserve the original values of width and height - they'll need 
         // to be modified during the animation, but can be restored once
         // the animation has completed.
         var finish = {width: this.style.width, height: this.style.height};

         // The original width and height represented as pixel values.
         // These will only be the same as `finish` if this element had its
         // dimensions specified explicitly and in pixels. Of course, if that 
         // was done then this entire routine is pointless, as the dimensions 
         // won't change when the content is changed.
         var cur = {width: el.width()+'px', height: el.height()+'px'};

         // Modify the element's contents. Element will resize.
         el.html(html);

         // Capture the final dimensions of the element 
         // (with initial style settings still in effect)
         var next = {width: el.width()+'px', height: el.height()+'px'};

         el .css(cur) // restore initial dimensions
            .animate(next, speed, function()  // animate to final dimensions
            {
               el.css(finish); // restore initial style settings
               if ( $.isFunction(callback) ) callback();
            });
      });
   };


})(jQuery);
link|flag
What is the point of the finish variable? And how is it different from cur? – ecoffey Nov 2 at 23:06
@ecoffey: finish holds the initial - and the final - values for the width and height styles. It will always be different from cur, which represents the styles needed to fix the element at its initial width and height; if they were ever the same, then the element's dimensions would not change with its content, and this animation would be pointless! – Shog9 Nov 2 at 23:53
you should be returning this.each – Matt Nov 2 at 23:54
@Matt: good catch, thanks. – Shog9 Nov 2 at 23:55
@Shog9: ah ok thanks; I think I had a different assumption about what was happening. Maybe I should just ctrl+c / ctrl+v this code and see it work before I keep on critiquing it :-P – ecoffey Nov 3 at 15:45
vote up 2 vote down

You can use the animate method.

$("div").animate({width:"200px"},400);
link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

maybe something like this?

$(".testLink").click(function(event) {
	event.preventDefault();
	$(".testDiv").hide(400,function(event) {
		$(this).html("Itsy-bitsy bit of content!").show(400);
	});
});

Close to what I think you wanted, also try slideIn/slideOut or look at the UI/Effects plugin.

link|flag
Not quite what I was going for. With this, the Div shrinks to nothing before expanding again. I want to eliminate that middle shrinkage so it goes directly to the new dimensions without zero-ing out in between. Does that make sense? None of the demos for UI/Effects seem to do this either. – neezer Oct 28 '08 at 21:26
vote up 1 vote down

Here is how I fixed this, I hope this will be usefull ! The animation is 100% smooth :)

HTML:

<div id="1"><div id="2">Some content here</div></div>

Javascript:

// tempory fix the outer div's width
$("#1").css({width: $("#2").width()});
// fade out inner div
$("#2").fadeOut('slow' , function(){
    // change the div content
    $("#1").html("<div id=\"2\" style=\"display: none;\">new content (with a new width)</div>", function(){
    	// give the outer div the same width as the inner div with a smooth animation
    	$("#1").animate({width: $("#2").width()}, function(){
    		// show the inner div
    		$("#2").fadeIn('slow');
    	});
    });
});

There might be a shorter version of my code, but I just kept it like this.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Hello meyahoocoma4c5ki0pprxr19sxhajsogo6jgks5dt.

You could wrap the 'content div' with an 'outer div' which is set to an absolute width value. Inject the new content with a "hide()" or "animate({width})" method, shown in the other answers. This way, the page doesn't reflow in between because the wrapper div holds a steady width.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.