50

I have an animated gif in an img tag that I start by rewriting the src attribute. The gif was created, though, to loop and I only want it to play once. Is there a way, with Javascript or jQuery, to stop an animated gif from playing more than once?

7

7 Answers 7

29

I was having the same problem with an animated gif. The solution is rather simple.

  1. Open the Animated gif in Photoshop.

  2. Go to the Window tab and select timeline(if the timeline is not already open).

  3. At the bottom of the timeline panel, you will find an option, which says "Forever". Change that to "Once".

  4. Go to File> Export> Export for Web and save it as a gif.

That should do it.

3
  • 1
    Seems that OP allows users to add gifs, so propably it's not an option to use Photoshop here
    – barbsan
    Feb 21, 2019 at 12:24
  • 5
    Also an online tool available for 'gif loop count changer'
    – konuralpt
    Mar 20, 2021 at 17:02
  • 1
    Note that the free GIMP offers similar features.
    – Déjà vu
    Oct 27, 2022 at 10:58
12

can you find out how long the gif takes to loop once? if so then you can stop the image like this:

pseudocode:

wait until the end of the image (when it is about to loop)
create a canvas element that has a static version of the gif as currently displayed drawn on it
hide gif
display canvas element in a way that makes it look like the gif froze

javascript:

var c = $("canvas")[0];
var w = c.width;
var h = c.height;
var img = $("img")[0];
setTimeout(function () {
    c.getContext('2d').drawImage(img, 0, 0, w, h);
    $(img).hide();
    $(c).show();
},10000);

jsfiddle

edit: I forgot to add reference to the original answer that I took this from, sorry

Stopping GIF Animation Programmatically

that one doesn't address the time factor you need for only one loop

Also, it has been mentioned that this approach is problamatic in certain cases (It actually didn't work when I try it in firefox right now...). so here are a few alternatives:

  1. mentioned by Mark: edit the gif itself to avoid looping. this is the best option if you can. but I've run into cases where it was not an option (like automated generation of images by a third party)

  2. instead of rendering the static image with canvas, keep a static image version and switch to stop looping . this probablyhas most of the problems as the canvas thing

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  • 4
    Wouldn't it be simpler to replace IMG's SRC with the static image? Oct 4, 2013 at 0:28
  • 1
    The amount of time it takes to display all frames of the gif will be variable, a slow connection for example will take much longer.
    – Snixtor
    Oct 4, 2013 at 0:29
  • @YuriyGalanter yes, it would be simpler. It would be even simpler to just get a non-looping version of the gif. but I already saw comments of those options, so I offered this solution, to avoid repetition
    – GuiDocs
    Oct 4, 2013 at 0:34
8

Actually it is possible to make a gif to stop after just one iteration or any specific number of iterations, see an example below (if it is not already stopped), or in jsfiddle.

gif with stops after two iterations

To do that the gif must be created with number of iterations specified. This could be done using Screen to Gif, it allows to open a gif or a bunch of images and edit it frame by frame.

This solution also allows you to reset the animation by imgElem.src = imgElem.src; but this does not work in MS IE/Edge.

2
  • in the Screen to GIF , how do you select the number of iterations??
    – ddor254
    Jul 9, 2018 at 13:15
  • 1
    @ddor254 it is File menu -> Save as … -> Gif - Gif options panel. Uncheck repeat forever and set Repeat count. Jul 10, 2018 at 14:31
7

Based on this answer, it's kinda expensive, but it works. Let's say a single loop takes 2 seconds. At a setTimeout after 2 seconds kick in a setInterval, that would reset image source every millisecond:

setTimeout(function() {
    setInterval(function() {
        $('#img1').attr('src',$('#img1').attr('src'))
    },1)
}, 2000)

again, probably just a proof of concept, but here's demo: http://jsfiddle.net/MEaWP/2/

4

Jurijs Kovzels's answer works in some condition but not in all.
This is browser-dependent.
It works well with Firefox. But In Google Chrome and Safari, it does not work if the gif is on the same server. The example he provided works because the gif is on the external server.
To restart gifs stored on the internal server, using Google Chrome and Safari, you need extra steps to make it work.

const img = document.getElementById("gif");
img.style = "display: none;";
img.style = "display: block;";
setTimeout(() => {
  img.src = img.src;
}, 0);

This is inspired by this answer.

0

I know I am pretty late here but..here it is...

I don't know if you would go to this length but let me share a trick.

Open the GIF in Macromedia Flash 8(it has deprecated since then), Export the GIF as Animated GIF. You will have to choose the file location. After that you would receive a dialog box with settings. In that, add the number of times you want the animation to happen. Click OK. Problem solved.

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  • 1
    are there any non-sketchy versions of macromedia flash 8 around? Surely there are other free gif tools around these days?
    – Tim Ogilvy
    Jun 24, 2018 at 16:27
  • Yes. I totally agree with that. But Macromedia Provides proper and professional tools to work on GIFs. Besides, I remember that the main aim of Macromedia Flash was to edit such fancy elements for websites. Jun 25, 2018 at 17:37
-1

Not sure if this is the best way to respond to everyone and have it appear after all the previous answers and comments, but it seems to work.

I don't have much control over the gif. People post whatever gif they want as the "thankyou.gif in their account directory and then the ThankYou code runs whatever they've put there when a comment is submitted to a form they've posted. So some may loop, some may not, some may be short, some may be long. The solution I've come to is to tell people to make them 5 seconds, because that's when I'm going to fade them out, and I don't care if they loop or not.

Thanks for all the ideas.

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