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Effects:

Custom animations with the animate() method

In previous chapters, we looked into the built-in fading and sliding effect methods of jQuery. However, you can much more than just that. With the animate() method, you can create custom animations where you manipulate pretty much any numerical CSS property of an element. This allows you to e.g. move a box slowly across the screen or have it jump up and down. Let's try something very simple:

<div style="height: 60px;">
	<div id="divTestBox1" style="height: 50px; width: 50px; background-color: #89BC38; position: absolute;"></div>
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function()
{
	$("#divTestBox1").animate(
		{
			"left" : "200px"
		}
	);
});
</script>

The first, and only required, parameter of the animate function is a map of the CSS properties that you wish to have altered. In this case, we have an absolutely positioned div element, which we tell jQuery to move until it has reached a left property of 200 pixels. The second parameter allows you to specify the duration of the animation in milliseconds or as "slow" or "fast" which is the same as 600 or 200 ms. With this, we can slow down the above example as much as we want:

<div style="height: 60px;">
	<div id="divTestBox2" style="height: 50px; width: 50px; background-color: #89BC38; position: absolute;"></div>
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function()
{
	$("#divTestBox2").animate(
		{
			"left" : "200px"
		}, 
		5000
	);
});
</script>

As the third parameter, we can specify a callback function to be called once the animation is done. This can be very useful for performing a number of different animations in a row. For instance, check out this example:

<div style="height: 40px;">
	<div id="divTestBox3" style="height: 20px; width: 20px; background-color: #89BC38; position: absolute;"></div>
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function()
{
	$("#divTestBox3").animate(
		{ "left" : "100px" }, 
		1000,
		function()
		{
			$(this).animate(
				{ "left" : "20px" },
				500,
				function()
				{
					$(this).animate({ "left" : "50px" }, 500);
				}
			)
		}
	);
});
</script>

It might seem a bit overwhelming, but what we do is that we call the animate method and ask for the left property of our test "div" to be animated until it reaches a left of 100 pixels. We want it to take 1 second (1000 milliseconds) and once it completes, we wish for a new animation to start, which moves it back to 20 pixels within half a second, and as soon as THAT animation is done, we move it a bit right again, so that it now has a left property of 50 pixels.

However, since jQuery comes with queue functionality for animations, you can actually achieve the above example in a much simpler manner. This however only applies when you want a set of animations to performed after each other - if you want to do something else when an animation is complete, the above example will still be the way to go. Here's the queue version:

<div style="height: 40px;">
	<div id="divTestBox4" style="height: 20px; width: 20px; background-color: #89BC38; position: absolute;"></div>
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function()
{
	$("#divTestBox4").animate({ "left" : "100px" }, 1000);
	$("#divTestBox4").animate({ "left" : "20px" }, 500);
	$("#divTestBox4").animate({ "left" : "50px" }, 500);
});
</script>

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