Is there any way to fadeout a div after 5 Seconds without using a setTimeOut function?
-
Do you want the animation to take 5 seconds or do you want to wait 5 seconds before the animation starts?– Adam BellaireFeb 11, 2009 at 12:14
-
Yes i want to wait 5 seconds before the animation starts. It's solved, I wrote function a $("div").fadeOut(10000); then it is working as what i want to do exactly!– Shiva Srikanth ThummidiFeb 13, 2009 at 12:06
7 Answers
everyone knows that in jquery 1.4 there's a delay function now, right?
$('#div').delay(5000).fadeOut(400)
that's how you do it, without having to add any custom functions or plug-ins. it's native to jquery 1.4
Case 1: if you want to start fadeOut after 5 seconds, use this:
jQuery.fn.delay = function(time,func){
return this.each(function(){
setTimeout(func,time);
});
};
Then, use it like this:
$('#div').delay(5000, function(){$(#div').fadeOut()})
You can't achieve this without using setTimeOut at all
Case 2: if you want the duration of fadeOut to be 5 seconds, use this:
$('#div').fadeOut(5000)
How about the fadeOut() function. Would look something like this:
$("#myDiv").fadeOut(5000);
-
6This doesn't really answer the question. He wants to fade after 5 seconds, not have the fade last for 5 seconds.– James BFeb 16, 2009 at 11:38
-
i want to wait 5 seconds before the animation starts. It's solved, I wrote function as $("div").fadeOut(10000); then it is working as what i want to do exactly with out using setTimeOut() function. Thank you! Feb 18, 2009 at 4:38
-
-
I agree with you comments friends, when this question was posted, that time there was no suitable answers for this question and that too i don't want to use setTimeOut() or any other plugins, Okay now i will accept the correct answer for this question. thanks for your valuable comments. Aug 13, 2013 at 9:43
I just had the same problem and in my opinion the marked answer doesn't actually really satisfy the question. If one specifies it like
$("#myDiv").fadeOut(5000);
as suggsted, the fading process itself will last for 5 seconds, but not start after 5 seconds.
So I was searching for an alternative, without having to include another jQuery plugin etc. The simplest solution I came up with was to write it as follows:
$("#myDiv").fadeTo(5000,1).fadeOut(1000);
It uses the fadeTo effect and it is somehow a "hack". I let the fadeTo run for 5 seconds and let it fade to 1 = 100% opacity. In this way the user doesn't perceive any change. Afterwards the normal call to fadeOut with a duration of the effect of 1 second.
I guess this solution is quite simple since it doesn't require any additional plugin and can be written in 1 line.
Cheers.
//EDIT:
Apparently there is now the possibility to do something like this:
$('#myDiv').delay(800).fadeOut(1000);
Here are some more cool, useful functions.
Not sure if you want it to take 5 seconds or start in 5 seconds.
For it to take 5 seconds: The jQuery fadeout function can be used on a div, and it will reduce the element's opacity until it is 0 and then display none the div. The speed of the fade is a parameter for the function.
http://docs.jquery.com/Effects/fadeOut#speedcallback
To start it in 5 seconds, you'll need some sort of timer that starts when the document or window is ready, or when the div is ready depending on what you want.
// i use this pause plugin i just wrote
$.fn.pause = function(duration) {
$(this).animate({ dummy: 1 }, duration);
return this;
};
Call it like this :
$("#mainImage").pause(5000).fadeOut();
Note: you don't need a callback.
-
for some reason pause(5000).css("opacity", .5) doesn't pause before setting the opacity, but it works for fadeout. anyone care to explain? note: when i said 'plugin i just wrote' i was trying to indicate 'not fully tested' - but it should work for what was asked for Feb 16, 2009 at 11:43
-
css() doesn't use the animation queue. if you want to pause before changing opacity you'd need something like "pause(5000).animate({ 'opacity': 0.5 });– mishacApr 9, 2009 at 12:21
Assuming you mean 'wait five seconds and then fade out', I think you'll have to use a plugin to force the delay, eg this one