2

I have seen a lot of usages where the requestAnimationFrame is being called and stopped, but I haven't seen anything regarding stopping it after x seconds. I have written this code:

http://codepen.io/anon/pen/PbvrVZ

And one snippet from my code, is like this:

function drawloop() {
        if (focused) {
            requestAnimationFrame(drawloop);
        }

I just can't understand how to stop the animation after, let's say, 4 seconds. I am a newbie in JavaScript. Should I use timeOut or intervals?

Edit: So, what I did is, this:

function drawloop() {
  var start = Date.now() // note this
    if (focused & Date.now() - start < 4000) {

        requestAnimationFrame(drawloop);
    }

Yet this is still not working. What am I doing wrong here?

5
  • Well, as I said: I can find that, but I can't find how to combine that with a timer! That's my question.
    – Siyah
    Dec 26, 2016 at 12:08
  • cancelAnimationFrame + setTimeout.
    – dfsq
    Dec 26, 2016 at 12:09
  • I am not sure that it really enters the if(focused & Date.now() - start < 4000) condition. Try checking by puting a debuggerthere
    – Ishank
    Dec 26, 2016 at 16:46
  • inserted the code snippet
    – Ishank
    Dec 26, 2016 at 17:00
  • Nope, not entering there. Is there an efficient manner to do so, instead of having to change the entire code? I don't why it's not getting the and operator.
    – Siyah
    Dec 26, 2016 at 23:38

2 Answers 2

3

The simplest way is use a variable to store when the rendering process start.

If it has been over 4 seconds, do not run the next frame

You probably don't need other function to finish your purpose.

function animateFor4Second() {
    var start = Date.now() // note this
    function loop() {
        console.log('rendering')
        if (Date.now() - start < 4000) { //note this also
            requestAnimationFrame(loop);
        }
    }
    loop(); // fire the initial loop
}

animateFor4Second()
1
  • So do you mean I need to add this, or I need to change my own function?
    – Siyah
    Dec 26, 2016 at 15:13
3

var myReq, start;
function step(timestamp){
if(!start)start = timestamp;


document.getElementById("aDiv").style.width = (parseInt(document.getElementById("aDiv").style.width,10)-.001)+"px";


if(
(timestamp - start) < 4000
){
myReq = requestAnimationFrame(step);
}
}

window.requestAnimationFrame(step);
<div id="aDiv" style="width:400px;height:100px;background-color:blue;">Test</div>
<button onclick="window.cancelAnimationFrame(myReq);">Stop Animation</button>
<button onclick="window.requestAnimationFrame(step);start=''">Start Animation</button>

var myReq, start;
function step(timestamp){
if(!start)start = timestamp;


document.getElementById("aDiv").style.width = (parseInt(document.getElementById("aDiv").style.width,10)-05)+"px";


if(parseInt(document.getElementById("aDiv").style.width,10)< 50 || 
(timestamp - start) > 4000
){
window.cancelAnimationFrame(myReq);
}else
myReq = requestAnimationFrame(step);
}

window.requestAnimationFrame(step);
<div id="aDiv" style="width:200px;height:100px;background-color:blue;">Test</div>  

3
  • Thanks, but what is meant with step? Is that a function name?
    – Siyah
    Dec 26, 2016 at 12:18
  • Thats a call back function that has the timestamp argument. check this- developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/window/…
    – Ishank
    Dec 26, 2016 at 12:38
  • This answer is theoretically superior to the other one since it’s using the timestamp argument, so it’s using the API properly. However, this answer could really benefit from some explanation. Code-only answers are discouraged. Feb 26, 2022 at 10:40

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