105

I need to make a FadeOut method (similar to jQuery) using D3.js. What I need to do is to set the opacity to 0 using transition().

d3.select("#myid").transition().style("opacity", "0");

The problem is that I need a callback to realize when the transition has finished. How can I implement a callback?

9 Answers 9

155

You want to listen for the "end" event of the transition.

// d3 v5
d3.select("#myid").transition().style("opacity","0").on("end", myCallback);

// old way
d3.select("#myid").transition().style("opacity","0").each("end", myCallback);
  • This demo uses the "end" event to chain many transitions in order.
  • The donut example that ships with D3 also uses this to chain together multiple transitions.
  • Here's my own demo that changes the style of elements at the start and end of the transition.

From the documentation for transition.each([type],listener):

If type is specified, adds a listener for transition events, supporting both "start" and "end" events. The listener will be invoked for each individual element in the transition, even if the transition has a constant delay and duration. The start event can be used to trigger an instantaneous change as each element starts to transition. The end event can be used to initiate multi-stage transitions by selecting the current element, this, and deriving a new transition. Any transitions created during the end event will inherit the current transition ID, and thus will not override a newer transition that was previously scheduled.

See this forum thread on the topic for more details.

Finally, note that if you just want to remove the elements after they have faded out (after the transition has finished), you can use transition.remove().

7
  • 7
    Thank you very much. This is a GREAT GREAT library, but it is not so easy to find the important information in the documentation.
    – Tony
    May 21, 2012 at 20:41
  • 9
    So, my problem with this way of continuing from the end of the transition is that it runs your function N times (for N items in the set of transitioning elements). This is far from ideal sometimes.
    – Steven Lu
    Oct 3, 2013 at 5:44
  • 2
    I have the same issue. Wish it would run the function once after the last remove
    – canyon289
    Jun 16, 2015 at 1:38
  • 1
    How do you perform a callback only after all the transitions finished for a d3.selectAll() (instead after each element finishes)? In other words, I just want to callback one function once all of the elements finish transitioning.
    – hobbes3
    Aug 11, 2016 at 10:33
  • 1
    Hi , the first link to stack/group bar chart points to an Observable notebook which doesn't use any .each event listener, nor the "end" event. It doesn't seem to "chain" transitions. The second link points to a github which doesn't load for me. Dec 31, 2018 at 20:19
66

Mike Bostock's solution for v3 with a small update:

  function endall(transition, callback) { 
    if (typeof callback !== "function") throw new Error("Wrong callback in endall");
    if (transition.size() === 0) { callback() }
    var n = 0; 
    transition 
        .each(function() { ++n; }) 
        .each("end", function() { if (!--n) callback.apply(this, arguments); }); 
  } 

  d3.selectAll("g").transition().call(endall, function() { console.log("all done") });
8
  • 5
    If the selection contains zero elements, the callback will never fire. One way to fix this is if (transition.size() === 0) { callback(); }
    – hughes
    Mar 24, 2015 at 19:12
  • 1
    if (!callback) callback = function(){}; why not return instantly, or throw an exception? An invalid callback does defeat the whole purpose of this rutine, why go through with it like a blind watchmaker? :)
    – prizma
    Nov 20, 2016 at 22:30
  • 1
    @kashesandr one can simply do nothing, since the user will experience the same effect: (no callback call at the end of the transition) function endall(transition, callback){ if(!callback) return; // ... } or, since it is most certanly an error to call this function without a callback, throwing an exception seams to be the appropriate way to handle the situation I think this case does not need too complicated Exception function endall(transition, callback){ if(!callback) throw "Missing callback argument!"; // .. }
    – prizma
    Nov 21, 2016 at 12:15
  • 1
    So when we have separate enter() and exit() transitions, and want to wait until all three have finished, we need to put code in the callback to make sure it's been invoked three times, right? D3 is so messy! I wish I'd chosen another library. Apr 19, 2018 at 0:23
  • 1
    I should add, I realise your answer solves some of the problems I griped about, and I can write a utility function to apply it. But I haven't found an elegant way to apply it and still allow additional customisation for each transition, especially when the transitions for new and old data are different. I'm sure I'll come up with something, but 'invoke this callback when all these transitions have finished' seems like a use case that should be supported out of the box, in a library as mature as D3. So it seems I've chosen the wrong library—not really D3's fault. Anyhoo, thanks for your help. Apr 19, 2018 at 18:23
44

Now, in d3 v4.0, there is a facility for explicitly attaching event handlers to transitions:

https://github.com/d3/d3-transition#transition_on

To execute code when a transition has completed, all you need is:

d3.select("#myid").transition().style("opacity", "0").on("end", myCallback);
3
  • Beautiful. Event handlers are gross.
    – KFunk
    Sep 8, 2016 at 1:07
  • There is also transition.remove() (link), which handles a common use case of transitioning an element from view: `"For each selected element, removes the element when the transition ends, as long as the element has no other active or pending transitions. If the element has other active or pending transitions, does nothing."
    – brichins
    Nov 4, 2016 at 18:35
  • 10
    It looks like this is called PER element that the transition is applied to, which is not what the question is in regards to from my understanding. Jul 4, 2017 at 13:42
10

A slightly different approach that works also when there are many transitions with many elements each running simultaneously:

var transitions = 0;

d3.select("#myid").transition().style("opacity","0").each( "start", function() {
        transitions++;
    }).each( "end", function() {
        if( --transitions === 0 ) {
            callbackWhenAllIsDone();
        }
    });
1
  • Thanks, that worked nicely for me. I was trying to customize the x-axis label orientation automatically after loading a discrete bar chart. The customization can't take effect before load, and this provided an event hook through which I could do this. Sep 17, 2015 at 16:51
8

As of D3 v5.8.0+, there is now an official way to do this using transition.end. The docs are here:

https://github.com/d3/d3-transition#transition_end

A working example from Bostock is here:

https://observablehq.com/@d3/transition-end

And the basic idea is that just by appending .end(), the transition will return a promise that won't resolve until all elements are done transitioning:

 await d3.selectAll("circle").transition()
      .duration(1000)
      .ease(d3.easeBounce)
      .attr("fill", "yellow")
      .attr("cx", r)
    .end();

See the version release notes for even more:

https://github.com/d3/d3/releases/tag/v5.8.0

1
  • 1
    This is a very nice way of handling things. I'll just say, for those of you like me who don't know all of v5 and would like to implement just this, you can import the new transition library using <script src="d3js.org/d3-transition.v1.min.js"></script>
    – DGill
    Dec 14, 2019 at 20:42
6

The following is another version of Mike Bostock's solution and inspired by @hughes' comment to @kashesandr's answer. It makes a single callback upon transition's end.

Given a drop function...

function drop(n, args, callback) {
    for (var i = 0; i < args.length - n; ++i) args[i] = args[i + n];
    args.length = args.length - n;
    callback.apply(this, args);
}

... we can extend d3 like so:

d3.transition.prototype.end = function(callback, delayIfEmpty) {
    var f = callback, 
        delay = delayIfEmpty,
        transition = this;

    drop(2, arguments, function() {
        var args = arguments;
        if (!transition.size() && (delay || delay === 0)) { // if empty
            d3.timer(function() {
                f.apply(transition, args);
                return true;
            }, typeof(delay) === "number" ? delay : 0);
        } else {                                            // else Mike Bostock's routine
            var n = 0; 
            transition.each(function() { ++n; }) 
                .each("end", function() { 
                    if (!--n) f.apply(transition, args); 
                });
        }
    });

    return transition;
}

As a JSFiddle.

Use transition.end(callback[, delayIfEmpty[, arguments...]]):

transition.end(function() {
    console.log("all done");
});

... or with an optional delay if transition is empty:

transition.end(function() {
    console.log("all done");
}, 1000);

... or with optional callback arguments:

transition.end(function(x) {
    console.log("all done " + x);
}, 1000, "with callback arguments");

d3.transition.end will apply the passed callback even with an empty transition if the number of milliseconds is specified or if the second argument is truthy. This will also forward any additional arguments to the callback (and only those arguments). Importantly, this will not by default apply the callback if transition is empty, which is probably a safer assumption in such a case.

5
  • That's nice, I like it.
    – kashesandr
    Jun 18, 2015 at 7:17
  • 1
    Thanks @kashesandr. This was indeed inspired by your answer to begin with!
    – Milos
    Jun 18, 2015 at 13:40
  • don't really think we need a drop function or passing of arguments, since the same effect can be achieved by a wrapper function or by utilizing bind. Otherwise I think it's a great solution +1 Nov 17, 2015 at 17:28
  • Works like a charm ! Dec 1, 2016 at 16:06
  • See this response, .end() has now been officially added - stackoverflow.com/a/57796240/228369
    – chrismarx
    Sep 5, 2019 at 13:03
0

Mike Bostock's solution improved by kashesandr + passing arguments to the callback function:

function d3_transition_endall(transition, callback, arguments) {
    if (!callback) callback = function(){};
    if (transition.size() === 0) {
        callback(arguments);
    }

    var n = 0;
    transition
        .each(function() {
            ++n;
        })
        .each("end", function() {
            if (!--n) callback.apply(this, arguments);
    });
}

function callback_function(arguments) {
        console.log("all done");
        console.log(arguments);
}

d3.selectAll("g").transition()
    .call(d3_transition_endall, callback_function, "some arguments");
-2

Actually there's one more way to do this using timers.

var timer = null,
    timerFunc = function () {
      doSomethingAfterTransitionEnds();
    };

transition
  .each("end", function() {
    clearTimeout(timer);
    timer = setTimeout(timerFunc, 100);
  });
0
-2

I solved a similar problem by setting a duration on transitions using a variable. Then I used setTimeout() to call the next function. In my case, I wanted a slight overlap between the transition and the next call, as you'll see in my example:

var transitionDuration = 400;

selectedItems.transition().duration(transitionDuration).style("opacity", .5);

setTimeout(function () {
  sortControl.forceSort();
}, (transitionDuration * 0.75)); 

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