A compact JavaScript animation library with a GUI timeline for fast editing.
Check it out in this example: http://vorg.github.com/timeline.js/examples/cssAnimation.html
More on the project website: http://marcinignac.com/blog/timeline-js/
Created by Marcin Ignac
<script type="text/javascript" src="timeline/timeline.js"></script>
anim(target).to(delay, {property:value,...}, duration, easing);
After specifying the target using anim() you can chain as many to() animations as you want. To start parallel track simply call anim() on the same target again.
Animate x property of the sprite object to 100 over 1s using quadratic easing. Then wait 5s and animate it back to 0 over 2s
anim(sprite).to({x:100}, 1, Timeline.Easing.Quadratic.EaseIn).to(5, {x:0}, 2);
Animate width and height of the rect object to 50 and 75 over 3s. At the same time animate opacity to 0 over 4s.
anim(rect).to({width:50, height:75}, 3);
anim(rect).to({opacity:0}, 4);
<script type="text/javascript" src="timeline/gui.js"></script>
anim(targetName, target).to(delay, {property:value,...}, duration, easing);
Adding gui.js script to the page will open a timeline panel on the bottom of the page if any animation was added before first frame. One track for every animated property will be created. Click and drag to edit key frames, double click to add new frames. Press export button (tree horizontal lines) to export code you can then copy paste in your scrip .
In this case we have to specify targetName in anim() that will be used when we export the code from the timeline GUI. For each property used in to() call there will be an animation track created. Animation data is stored in localStorage and shared between sessions so refreshing the page and adding new properties and objects to be animated is possible. When an animation track exists in localStorage all to() calls modifying this property are ignored.
anim("rect", rect).to({x:rect.x, y:rect.y});
Add the rect object and it's x and y properties to animation and use their default values. Target name should be always exactly the same as variable name.