There are many ways to do this. One way is to use an animation delay set to the number of elements, then cycle opacity between 0 and 1.
There's a bit of hardcoding going on here with the keyframe percentages and a CSS preprocessor or separate ids per <p>
element could be used to avoid JS, so consider it a proof of concept. Since display
can't be animated, I used position: absolute
to overlap elements. I also took the liberty to speed up the animation but it should be easy to adjust to fit your needs.
const elems = [...document.querySelectorAll("p")];
elems.forEach((e, i) => {
e.style.animationDuration = `${elems.length * 2000}ms`;
e.style.animationDelay = `${i * 2000}ms`;
});
@keyframes fade {
0% {
opacity: 0;
}
3% {
opacity: 1;
}
20% {
opacity: 0;
}
}
p {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
opacity: 0;
animation-name: fade;
animation-iteration-count: infinite;
}
<p>Hide 1</p>
<p>Hide 2</p>
<p>Hide 3</p>
<p>Hide 4</p>
<p>Hide 5</p>
<p>Hide 6</p>
This can also be done in JS. The version below uses setTimeout
aligned to match the opacity duration and is easily adjustable.
const speedMs = 2000;
const fadeInMs = speedMs * 0.1;
const fadeOutMs = speedMs * 0.9;
const elems = [...document.querySelectorAll("p")];
const fade = (e, fadeIn, fadeOut) => {
Object.assign(e.style, {
opacity: 1,
transition: `opacity ${fadeIn}ms`,
});
setTimeout(() => {
Object.assign(e.style, {
opacity: 0,
transition: `opacity ${fadeOut}ms`,
});
}, fadeIn);
};
elems.forEach((e, i) => {
Object.assign(e.style, {
position: "absolute",
top: 0,
opacity: 0,
});
setTimeout(() => {
fade(e, fadeInMs, fadeOutMs);
setInterval(fade, speedMs * elems.length,
e, fadeInMs, fadeOutMs);
}, i * speedMs);
});
<p>Hide 1</p>
<p>Hide 2</p>
<p>Hide 3</p>
<p>Hide 4</p>
<p>Hide 5</p>
<p>Hide 6</p>
p
andelement
?