Shifty
npm install --save shifty
Download • Source
Shifty is a JavaScript tweening engine designed to fit all of your animation needs. Shifty's key benefits include:
- Speed: Shifty is optimized for smooth animation performance, even with many concurrent animations.
- Flexibility and extensibility: Shifty provides numerous low-level APIs to let you hook into its animation pipeline.
- Small footprint: The full build is less than 6Kb when minified and gzipped.
Promise
support: Shifty's tweens can beawait
ed. Learn about the benefits ofasync
/await
-based animations.
If you're looking for a high-performance animation engine with low overhead, minimal memory footprint, and a permissive license (MIT), Shifty might be the right choice for you!
Shifty is a low-level animation solution. It does not perform any rendering, but it can be easily integrated into whatever rendering mechanism is most appropriate for your project. Shifty is meant to be a lightweight alternative to richer tools like the excellent GreenSock Animation Platform.
Shifty powers Stylie and Mantra, a suite of graphical animation tools. It is also the tweening engine used by GDevelop and ProgessBar.js. Even Yelp has used it!
Please use, fork, and contribute to Shifty! It is distributed under the MIT License, and experimentation is encouraged. If you find a bug or have a question about Shifty, please submit it via the Github issue tracker.
See the Pen Shifty async/await demo by Jeremy Kahn (@jeremyckahn) on CodePen.
Getting started with Shifty
Take a look at the Getting Started guide to hit the ground running. The most important class in Shifty is
, but you may also find Tweenable
handy for controlling groups of tweens.Scene
Demos
Sequencing
See the Pen Shifty Sequencing Demo by Jeremy Kahn (@jeremyckahn) on CodePen.
await
ed tweens
See the Pen Primise-chained tweens by Jeremy Kahn (@jeremyckahn) on CodePen.
This next example demonstrates how await
ed tweens interoperate well with standard JavaScript try
/catch
blocks, as well as infinite while
loops. Typically you'd want to avoid intentionally infinite loops, but it's common to need animations to loop indefinitely. A while (true)
loop is a simple way to achieve this. The ball in this demo pulsates repeatedly, but the animation loop is gracefully interrupted when the user clicks anywhere else within the demo. Response to the user's input is handled in catch
blocks, wherein the ball swings over to where the user clicked. From there it continues to pulsate. With await
ed tweens, you can have full control over the lifecycle of an animation with standard JavaScript programming constructs, rather than a library API that may or may not integrate well with other libraries.
See the Pen async/await try/catch demo by Jeremy Kahn (@jeremyckahn) on CodePen.
Tweening with a custom easing formula
See the Pen Tweening with a custom easing formula by Jeremy Kahn (@jeremyckahn) on CodePen.
Shifting a color
See the Pen Shifting a color by Jeremy Kahn (@jeremyckahn) on CodePen.
Tweening numbers within an arbitrary string
See the Pen Tweening numbers within an arbitrary string by Jeremy Kahn (@jeremyckahn) on CodePen.