10

I am trying to add a momentum / inertia effect to a zoomed image drag (like in this example or just like iOs does it) and I'm having a tough time with it.

I've been struggling with this for a while and found some helpful resources (like this one) but most of the solutions involve jQuery and I would prefer to stick to plain javascript, no frameworks involved.

I'm working on a HTML5 / CSS3 zoom image code, with all the standard features: double-tap zoom, pinch zooming, dragging, panning, etc. and everything is done using CSS3's transform translation, combined with the scaling. Ex.

transform: translate(100px, 100px);
transition: 100ms;

I looked at how others are doing it and it involves consecutive animations of the left/right properties, with decreasing duration / distance, to create a sort of ease-in effect.

I tried to recreate it using translations, using a sort of recursive function (you can see a fiddle here (works with webkit browsers), please ignore the coding style, it was not meant to be best practice, just a demo). In this case, the animation is not fluid it all, the consecutive translations do not connect.

I have a somewhat basic understanding of the principle and I did take a look at some algorithms available online but I just can't figure out how can I achieve this using css translations.

The first part of the dragging, done on mousemove/touchmove moves the image with the cursor/finger but the continuing translation after the end is not... continuous, it's like a separate animation after the first one and doesn't resemble a natural momentum / inertia effect.

2 Answers 2

10

I managed to find something helpful in the end, it is still a work in progress but the results look promising.

The starting point was this post made by Aryia Hidayat and in particular his Kinetic Scroll, as well as a post made by Joe Hewitt. Also, this older version of his code seemed easier to understand and grasp the basic concept, even though the most recent should be better.

Basically, instead of connecting various translations with a non-null duration and synchronize their timing and acceleration, this method uses a large number of 0-duration translations, called very often.

1
  • Care to elaborate what "crap" is meant above? Dec 28, 2013 at 1:50
2

One method is using animation-timing-function:, which I believe currently requires vendor prefixes. You have a choice of using ease-in, ease-out, ease-in-out, or cubic-bezier. The latter uses the visualization of a function in 2D space; it's easier to configure that one using a generator. My personal favorite is Ceaser.

6
  • Yes, I looked at Ceaser before and it's a very nice tool. But as far as I know ease-in is already the default option for the animation. The problem I have it's with combining sequential transformations. I have one translation during the actual drag and when I try to apply another one (or more) after it ends, the result is not fluid
    – BBog
    Aug 20, 2012 at 13:52
  • This seems complicated. I'll do a bit of research and get back to you.
    – Jules
    Aug 20, 2012 at 13:53
  • Thank you for your help. It is indeed complicated, I've been trying to solve this quite some time now and every solution I found involved jQuery and/or animating the left/right values. It's hard to believe no one tried to do this before with HTML5
    – BBog
    Aug 20, 2012 at 13:59
  • 1
    Indeed. It's a bit soon to presume, but it doesn't look like this question's taking off. Could I recommend that you ask on alternative web development fora, like Daniweb?
    – Jules
    Aug 20, 2012 at 14:02
  • I will give it a try but I think it's too soon. I'll probably wait until tomorrow
    – BBog
    Aug 20, 2012 at 14:12

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.