33

I can rotate a div with css, and jquery .rotate, but i don't know how to animate it.

5
  • What kind of animation? Several are built into jQuery. There are even some with CSS 3. Sep 24, 2010 at 18:45
  • just like the kind when you .animate, and give it different CSS properties... like I want it to rotate to the new position. Sep 24, 2010 at 18:47
  • An example to your question is very helpful to answer. please provide an Example (if possible).
    – user372551
    Sep 24, 2010 at 18:51
  • 1
    I just want a div. with anything in it. to rotate. but show the rotation as an animation, as if you were to do it by hand in real life.... =\ Sep 24, 2010 at 20:13
  • Check out this jQuery patch: zachstronaut.com/posts/2009/08/07/… Seems like it should do the trick! Sep 24, 2010 at 20:21

8 Answers 8

27

Make use of WebkitTransform / -moz-transform: rotate(Xdeg). This will not work in IE, but Matt's zachstronaut solution doesn't work in IE either.

If you want to support IE too, you'll have to look into using a canvas like I believe Raphael does.

Here is a simple jQuery snippet that rotates the elements in a jQuery object. Rotation can be started and stopped:

$(function() {
    var $elie = $("img"), degree = 0, timer;
    rotate();
    function rotate() {
        
        $elie.css({ WebkitTransform: 'rotate(' + degree + 'deg)'});  
        $elie.css({ '-moz-transform': 'rotate(' + degree + 'deg)'});                      
        timer = setTimeout(function() {
            ++degree; rotate();
        },5);
    }
    
    $("input").toggle(function() {
        clearTimeout(timer);
    }, function() {
        rotate();
    });
}); 
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="button" value=" Toggle Spin " />
<br/><br/><br/><br/>
<img src="http://i.imgur.com/ABktns.jpg" />

2
14

If you're designing for an iOS device or just webkit, you can do it with no JS whatsoever:

CSS:

@-webkit-keyframes spin {  
from {  
    -webkit-transform: rotate(0deg);  
}  
to {  
    -webkit-transform: rotate(360deg);  
    } 
}

.wheel {
    width:40px;
    height:40px;
    background:url(wheel.png);
    -webkit-animation-name: spin; 
    -webkit-animation-iteration-count: infinite; 
    -webkit-animation-timing-function: linear;
    -webkit-animation-duration: 3s; 
}

This would trigger the animation on load. If you wanted to trigger it on hover, it might look like this:

.wheel {
    width:40px;
    height:40px;
    background:url(wheel.png);
}

.wheel:hover {
    -webkit-animation-name: spin; 
    -webkit-animation-iteration-count: infinite; 
    -webkit-animation-timing-function: ease-in-out;
    -webkit-animation-duration: 3s; 
}
1
  • 4
    @khaled_webdev that's why I said "If you're designing for an iOS device or just webkit"
    – inorganik
    Dec 6, 2012 at 20:59
10

I've been using

$.fn.rotate = function(degrees, step, current) {
    var self = $(this);
    current = current || 0;
    step = step || 5;
    current += step;
    self.css({
        '-webkit-transform' : 'rotate(' + current + 'deg)',
        '-moz-transform' : 'rotate(' + current + 'deg)',
        '-ms-transform' : 'rotate(' + current + 'deg)',
        'transform' : 'rotate(' + current + 'deg)'
    });
    if (current != degrees) {
        setTimeout(function() {
            self.rotate(degrees, step, current);
        }, 5);
    }
};

$(".r90").click(function() { $("span").rotate(90) });
$(".r0").click(function() { $("span").rotate(0, -5, 90) });
span { display: inline-block }
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.8.3/jquery.min.js"></script>
<span>potato</span>

<button class="r90">90 degrees</button>
<button class="r0">0 degrees</button>

1
8

If you want just a jQuery option, this will work:

$(el).stop().animate(
  {rotation: 360},
  {
    duration: 500,
    step: function(now, fx) {
      $(this).css({"transform": "rotate("+now+"deg)"});
    }
  }
);

This works with jQuery 1.8, which takes care of CSS prefixing automatically. jQuery doesn't animate rotation so I'm putting the transform:rotate() in the custom step function. It might only work starting from 0.

Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/forresto/ShUgD/

IE9 and Mobile Safari 4 support CSS transforms but not CSS transitions, so I came up with this simple shim, using Modernizr feature testing:

if (Modernizr.csstransitions) {
  $(el).css({
    "transition": "all 500ms ease-in-out"
  });
}

$(el).click(function(){
  var rotateTo = 360;
  if (Modernizr.csstransitions) {
    $(el).css({"transform": "rotate("+rotateTo+"deg)"});
  } else {
    $(el).stop().animate(
      {rotation: rotateTo},
      {
        duration: 500,
        step: function(now, fx) {
          $(this).css({"transform": "rotate("+now+"deg)"});
        }
      }
    );
  }
});

The above will use CSS transitions when available.

0
4

As of now you still can't animate rotations with jQuery, but you can with CSS3 animations, then simply add and remove the class with jQuery to make the animation occur.

JSFiddle demo


HTML

<img src="http://puu.sh/csDxF/2246d616d8.png" width="30" height="30"/>

CSS3

img {
-webkit-transform: rotate(-90deg);
-moz-transform: rotate(-90deg);
-o-transform: rotate(-90deg);
-ms-transform: rotate(-90deg);
transform: rotate(-90deg);
transition-duration:0.4s;
}

.rotate {
-webkit-transform: rotate(0deg);
-moz-transform: rotate(0deg);
-o-transform: rotate(0deg);
-ms-transform: rotate(0deg);
transform: rotate(0deg);
transition-duration:0.4s;
}

jQuery

$(document).ready(function() {
    $("img").mouseenter(function() {
        $(this).addClass("rotate");
    });
    $("img").mouseleave(function() {
        $(this).removeClass("rotate");
    });
});
3

Based on Peter Ajtai answer, here is a small jquery plugin that may help others. I didn't test on Opera and IE9 but is should work on these browsers too.

$.fn.rotate = function(until, step, initial, elt) {
    var _until = (!until)?360:until;
    var _step = (!step)?1:step;
    var _initial = (!initial)?0:initial;
    var _elt = (!elt)?$(this):elt;

    var deg = _initial + _step;

    var browser_prefixes = ['-webkit', '-moz', '-o', '-ms'];
    for (var i=0, l=browser_prefixes.length; i<l; i++) {
      var pfx = browser_prefixes[i]; 
      _elt.css(pfx+'-transform', 'rotate('+deg+'deg)');
    }

    if (deg < _until) {
      setTimeout(function() {
          $(this).rotate(_until, _step, deg, _elt); //recursive call
      }, 5);
    }
};

$('.my-elt').rotate()
3
  • but what if rorate had 90deg => start form 0 ? if run rotate() -> should show degree not rotate
    – user956584
    Oct 15, 2012 at 13:38
  • To be able to rotate both directions: var deg = (_initial < _step) ? _initial + _step : _initial - _step; Also, Jquery automatically does prefixing now.
    – forresto
    Dec 23, 2012 at 20:58
  • The main issue with this solution is that it doesn't animate based on time like $.animate(), so rotating 180º takes twice as long as 90º.
    – forresto
    Dec 24, 2012 at 16:20
2

This works for me:

function animateRotate (object,fromDeg,toDeg,duration){
    var dummy = $('<span style="margin-left:'+fromDeg+'px;">')
    $(dummy).animate({
        "margin-left":toDeg+"px"
    },{
        duration:duration,
        step: function(now,fx){
            $(object).css('transform','rotate(' + now + 'deg)');
        }
    });
};
1
  • This works way better than the other solutions for arbitrary start positions! Good job :). Sep 5, 2014 at 16:32
0

I needed to rotate an object but have a call back function. Inspired by John Kern's answer I created this.

function animateRotate (object,fromDeg,toDeg,duration,callback){
        var dummy = $('<span style="margin-left:'+fromDeg+'px;">')
        $(dummy).animate({
            "margin-left":toDeg+"px"
        },
        {
            duration:duration,
            step: function(now,fx){
                $(object).css('transform','rotate(' + now + 'deg)');
                if(now == toDeg){
                    if(typeof callback == "function"){
                        callback();
                    }
                }
            }
        }
    )};

Doing this you can simply call the rotate on the object like so... (in my case I'm doing it on a disclosure triangle icon that has already been rotated by default to 270 degress and I'm rotating it another 90 degrees to 360 degrees at 1000 milliseconds. The final argument is the callback after the animation has finished.

animateRotate($(".disclosure_icon"),270,360,1000,function(){
                alert('finished rotate');
            });

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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