css3 transition with margin-left auto in ff/opera - css

I have a #header-element with margin: 0 auto. I added a media-query:
#media screen and (max-width: 950px) {
#header {
-webkit-transition: all 0.6s ease-out;
-moz-transition: all 0.6s ease-out;
-o-transition: all 0.6s ease-out;
margin-left: 0;
}
}
-moz and -o ignore the transition attributes: margin-left is set immediately to 0, while -webkit behaves as expected.
When using a numeral instead of auto, firefox and opera do apply the transition.
How do I make Mozilla and Opera apply the transition while still using auto?

Using -moz-transition: all 0.6s cubic-bezier(0, 0, 0.58, 1) 0s; seems to work on Firefox on Ubuntu. (That's how Opera interpreted ease-out.) Try it on Windows.

Related

Why transition isn't working with opacity, unless timing is in seconds

Jsfiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/techsin/ww4y5rj7/
Unless i define time in seconds like 2s and not cubic-bezier or even ease-in or ease-out. There is no effect on opacity. I'm using chrome.
However, if i just change opacity to width then it works as expected.
why and how can i fix this..
.main {
background-color: #4a0;
padding: 20px;
transition-timing-function: ease-out;
-moz-transition-timing-function: ease-out;
-webkit-transition-timing-function: ease-out;
}

Make css3 animations off in just opera browser

How can i turn all css3 animations off in just Opera browser ?
I don't want to pickup them completly , just want to turn it off in opera.
You'll be looking at targeting just the opera browser, this is done with a prefix:
-o-transition: none;
So targeting a specific element would have the following:
a {
-webkit-transition: all 0.5s ease-in-out;
-moz-transition: all 0.5s ease-in-out;
-ms-transition: all 0.5s ease-in-out;
-o-transition: none;
transition: all 0.5s ease-in-out;
}
But your transition might be different without looking at a fiddle of your html and css.
At least, i used this code:
noindex:-o-prefocus, * {
animation : none !important;
-o-animation : none !important;
}
and problem is fixed.

css3 transform on image hover in firefox

.mark.studio{
background: url(../images/studio_icon.png) no-repeat;
-webkit-transition: all .3s ease-in-out;
-moz-transition: all .3s ease-in-out;
-ms-transition: all .3s ease-in-out;
height: 50px;
width: 50px;
z-index:103 !important;
}
.mark.studio:hover{
-webkit-transition: all .3s ease-in-out;
-moz-transition: all .3s ease-in-out;
-ms-transition: all .3s ease-in-out;
background: url(../images/studio_icon-hover.png) no-repeat;
z-index:103 !important;
}
With this css on hover the image morphs from the original image to the hover image giving a really cool effect, in firefox and IE9 I just get a hover image replacement. I put the -webkit-transition in both selectors but i'm pretty sure it only needs to be in
.mark.studio
Specify the unprefixed version of transition; Firefox and Internet Explorer dropped the prefixes. (Note that it’s Internet Explorer 10; IE9 doesn’t support transition.)
.mark.studio {
background: url(../images/studio_icon.png) no-repeat;
-webkit-transition: all .3s ease-in-out;
-moz-transition: all .3s ease-in-out;
transition: all .3s ease-in-out;
height: 50px;
width: 50px;
z-index: 103 !important;
}
.mark.studio:hover {
background-image: url(../images/studio_icon-hover.png);
}
I took the liberty of taking z-index and transition off the :hover state; it’s pointless to add them again. (Unless you have another z-index with !important that overrides it, which would be a really bad design.)
Internet Explorer 9 doesn't support the -ms-transition tag, it only works properly on Internet Explorer 10 and up. IE10 supports both.

CSS transition shorthand with multiple properties?

I can't seem to find the correct syntax for the CSS transition shorthand with multiple properties. This doesn't do anything:
.element {
-webkit-transition: height .5s, opacity .5s .5s;
-moz-transition: height .5s, opacity .5s .5s;
-ms-transition: height .5s, opacity .5s .5s;
transition: height .5s, opacity .5s .5s;
height: 0;
opacity: 0;
overflow: 0;
}
.element.show {
height: 200px;
opacity: 1;
}
I add the show class with javascript. The element becomes higher and visible, it just doesn't transition. Testing in latest Chrome, FF and Safari.
What am I doing wrong?
EDIT: Just to be clear, I'm looking for the shorthand version to scale my CSS down. It's bloated enough with all the vendor prefixes. Also expanded the example code.
Syntax:
transition: <property> || <duration> || <timing-function> || <delay> [, ...];
Note that the duration must come before the delay, if the latter is specified.
Individual transitions combined in shorthand declarations:
-webkit-transition: height 0.3s ease-out, opacity 0.3s ease 0.5s;
-moz-transition: height 0.3s ease-out, opacity 0.3s ease 0.5s;
-o-transition: height 0.3s ease-out, opacity 0.3s ease 0.5s;
transition: height 0.3s ease-out, opacity 0.3s ease 0.5s;
Or just transition them all:
-webkit-transition: all 0.3s ease-out;
-moz-transition: all 0.3s ease-out;
-o-transition: all 0.3s ease-out;
transition: all 0.3s ease-out;
Here is a straightforward example. Here is another one with the delay property.
Edit: previously listed here were the compatibilities and known issues regarding transition. Removed for readability.
Bottom-line: just use it. The nature of this property is non-breaking for all applications and compatibility is now well above 94% globally.
If you still want to be sure, refer to http://caniuse.com/css-transitions
If you have several specific properties that you want to transition in the same way (because you also have some properties you specifically don't want to transition, say opacity), another option is to do something like this (prefixes omitted for brevity):
.myclass {
transition: all 200ms ease;
transition-property: box-shadow, height, width, background, font-size;
}
The second declaration overrides the all in the shorthand declaration above it and makes for (occasionally) more concise code.
/* prefixes omitted for brevity */
.box {
height: 100px;
width: 100px;
background: red;
box-shadow: red 0 0 5px 1px;
transition: all 500ms ease;
/*note: not transitioning width */
transition-property: height, background, box-shadow;
}
.box:hover {
height: 50px;
width: 50px;
box-shadow: blue 0 0 10px 3px;
background: blue;
}
<p>Hover box for demo</p>
<div class="box"></div>
Demo
I made it work with this:
.element {
transition: height 3s ease-out, width 5s ease-in;
}
One important thing to note is that the CSS transition property itself is a shorthand - as mentioned in the MDN Web Docs :
The transition CSS property is a shorthand property for transition-property, transition-duration, transition-timing-function, and transition-delay.
The ideal use of this shorthand is to combine the various Constituent properties of a single transition. If this is used to combine multiple transitions, it will start to get clunky.
So when you have more than 2 transitions on the same element which different constituent properties, it becomes easier to write them individually instead of using the transition shorthand. For example:
This is the shorthand version(Option 1) of multiple transitions on one element:
transition: transform 0.5s ease-in-out, box-shadow 0.2s ease-out, filter 0.1s ease-out, color 0.25s ease-in 0.2s;
As you can see, this gets clunky and a little bit harder to visualize.
The same CSS can be applied like this(Option 2):
transition-property: transform, box-shadow, filter, color;
transition-duration: 0.5s, 0.2s, 0.2s, 0.25s;
transition-timing-function: ease-in-out, ease-out, ease-out, ease-in;
transition-delay: 0s, 0s, 0s, 0.2s
Of course, ultimately it all just comes down to your preference of typing and maintaining your source code. But I personally prefer the 2nd option.
TIP:
Additional benefit of using this is, if one of the Constituent properties is same for all transitions, you don't need to mention it multiple times. For example, in the above example, if the transition-duration was the same(0.5s) for all, you write it like this:
transition-property: transform, box-shadow, filter, color;
transition-duration: 0.5s;
transition-timing-function: ease-in-out, ease-out, ease-out, ease-in;
transition-delay: 0s, 0s, 0s, 0.2s
By having the .5s delay on transitioning the opacity property, the element will be completely transparent (and thus invisible) the whole time its height is transitioning. So the only thing you will actually see is the opacity changing. So you will get the same effect as leaving the height property out of the transition :
"transition: opacity .5s .5s;"
Is that what you're wanting? If not, and you're wanting to see the height transition, you can't have an opacity of zero during the whole time that it's transitioning.
This helped me understand / streamline, only what I needed to animate:
// SCSS - Multiple Animation: Properties | durations | etc.
// on hover, animate div (width/opacity) - from: {0px, 0} to: {100vw, 1}
.base {
max-width: 0vw;
opacity: 0;
transition-property: max-width, opacity; // relative order
transition-duration: 2s, 4s; // effects relatively ordered animation properties
transition-delay: 6s; // effects delay of all animation properties
animation-timing-function: ease;
&:hover {
max-width: 100vw;
opacity: 1;
transition-duration: 5s; // effects duration of all aniomation properties
transition-delay: 2s, 7s; // effects relatively ordered animation properties
}
}
~ This applies for all transition properties (duration, transition-timing-function, etc.) within the '.base' class
I think that this should work:
.element {
-webkit-transition: all .3s;
-moz-transition: all .3s;
-o-transition: all .3s;
transition: all .3s;
}

Disable/turn off inherited CSS3 transitions

So I have the following CSS transitions attached to an element:
a {
-webkit-transition:color 0.1s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in ;
-moz-transition:color 0.1s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in;
-o-transition:color 0.1s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in;
transition:color 0.1s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in;
}
Is there a way to disable these inherited transitions on specific elements?
a.tags { transition: none; }
Doesn't seem to be doing the job.
The use of transition: none seems to be supported (with a specific adjustment for Opera) given the following HTML:
Content
Content
Content
Content
...and CSS:
a {
color: #f90;
-webkit-transition:color 0.8s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in ;
-moz-transition:color 0.8s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in;
-o-transition:color 0.8s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in;
transition:color 0.8s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in;
}
a:hover {
color: #f00;
-webkit-transition:color 0.8s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in ;
-moz-transition:color 0.8s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in;
-o-transition:color 0.8s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in;
transition:color 0.8s ease-in, background-color 0.1s ease-in;
}
a.noTransition {
-moz-transition: none;
-webkit-transition: none;
-o-transition: color 0 ease-in;
transition: none;
}
JS Fiddle demo.
Tested with Chromium 12, Opera 11.x and Firefox 5 on Ubuntu 11.04.
The specific adaptation to Opera is the use of -o-transition: color 0 ease-in; which targets the same property as specified in the other transition rules, but sets the transition time to 0, which effectively prevents the transition from being noticeable. The use of the a.noTransition selector is simply to provide a specific selector for the elements without transitions.
Edited to note that #Frédéric Hamidi's answer, using all (for Opera, at least) is far more concise than listing out each individual property-name that you don't want to have transition.
Updated JS Fiddle demo, showing the use of all in Opera: -o-transition: all 0 none, following self-deletion of #Frédéric's answer.
If you want to disable a single transition property, you can do:
transition: color 0s;
(since a zero second transition is the same as no transition.)
Another way to remove all transitions is with the unset keyword:
a.tags {
transition: unset;
}
When used with the transition property, unset is equivalent to initial, since transition is not an inherited property:
a.tags {
transition: initial;
}
A reader who knows about unset and initial can tell that these solutions are correct immediately, without having to think about the specific syntax of transition.
Additionally there is a possibility to set a list of properties that will get transitioned by setting the property transition-property: width, height;, more details here
You could also disinherit all transitions inside a containing element:
CSS:
.noTrans *{
-moz-transition: none;
-webkit-transition: none;
-o-transition: color 0 ease-in;
transition: none;
}
HTML:
Content
Content
<div class="noTrans">
Content
</div>
Content
Based on W3schools default transition value is: all 0s ease 0s, which should be the cross-browser compatible way of disabling the transition.
Here is a link: https://www.w3schools.com/cssref/css3_pr_transition.asp

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