7

I'm trying to design a website in which different pieces of information are held in different divs. The user clicks a link and the current div fades until transparent and translates to the right, while the new one fades in from the left. The idea is to call a function that adds a "fadeOut" class to the old div, add a "fadeIn" class to the new one, and then remove the extra classes from the old div so that it can start over. It can only remove the extra classes from the old div after all the transitions are finished, of the old div will disappear rather than fading out. I tried to accomplish this using a transitionend listener, but it seems that the transitionend function is running immediately when I create it, rather than after the transition actually ends.

I made a JSFiddle with the core of the problematic code at http://jsfiddle.net/mmmm_cake/Q78pz/4/, and I'm copying it here:

<head>
    <style>
        .page {
            position:fixed;
            margin-left:15%;
            margin-right:15%;
            top:40px;
            left:-20px;
            opacity:0
        }
        .page.fadeIn {
            transition:0.5s;
            opacity:1;
            left:0px
        }
        .page.fadeOut {
            transition:0.5s;
            opacity:0;
            left:20px;
        }
    </style>
    <script>
        var active = 'about';

        function reset(page) {
            page.classList.remove('fadeOut');
            page.classList.remove('fadeIn');
        }

        function show(id) {
            page = document.getElementById(id);
            page.classList.add('fadeIn');
        }

        function hide(id) {
            page = document.getElementById(id);
            page.addEventListener('transitionend', reset(page), false);
            page.classList.add('fadeOut');
            page.removeEventListener('transitionend', reset(page), false);
        }

        function switchTo(id) {
            hide(active);
            show(id);
            active = id;
        }
    </script>
</head>
<body onload="show(active)">
    <div id="navbar">
        <a href="javascript:switchTo('about')">About</a>
        <a href="javascript:switchTo('contact')">Contact Us</a>
    </div>
    <div id="about" class="page">
        <h3>
            About Us
        </h3>
        <p>
            Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit.
        </p>
    </div>
    <div id="contact" class="page">
        <h3>
            Contact Form
        </h3>
        <p>
            Nulla quis commodo arcu. Etiam facilisis risus nulla, vel tempus arcu ultricies eu.
        </p>
    </div>
</body>

I've tried tweaking it many different ways, and as far as I can tell, it all comes down to the transitionend event not firing properly. I've seen lots of people saying that it doesn't fire at all for them, but anyone know how to fix it when it fires too soon?

1 Answer 1

4

Edit:

After having a look at your fiddle, I found several issues with your code.

  1. The reason your reset is firing immediately (The topic my original answer dealt with) is that you are calling it instead of adding it as an event listener.

  2. You call show before the transition ends, and so when calling reset, the fadein class is removed and the new page is hidden.

I have forked your fiddle with some changes to make it work.


For completeness, my original answer:

You have a mistake in your hide(id) function

You are calling reset immediately. Change reset(page) to reset.bind(null, page):

function hide(id) {
    page = document.getElementById(id);
    page.addEventListener('transitionend', *reset(page)*, false);
    page.classList.add('fadeOut');
    page.removeEventListener('transitionend', *reset(page)*, false);
}

To

function hide(id) {
    page = document.getElementById(id);
    page.addEventListener('transitionend', reset.bind(null, page), false);
    page.classList.add('fadeOut');
    page.removeEventListener('transitionend', reset.bind(null, page), false);
}
2
  • Thanks! Your solution works perfectly, but I'm a little lost. What exactly does passing the the function onHidden to the function hide do?
    – mmmm_cake
    Jul 16, 2014 at 21:40
  • That's just the callback. It is called inside the hide function when it is complete (The done argument inside). It can also be an anonymous function, however, when you give it a function name, if there is an error, that function name will be printed on the stack trace.
    – major-mann
    Jul 17, 2014 at 6:27

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