smoothr
v0.5.4
Published
Smoothr: Smooth Router - A custom React router that leverages the Web Animations API and CSS animations.
Downloads
33
Maintainers
Readme
Smoothr
Smooth Router
A custom React router that leverages the Web Animations API and CSS animations.
Features
- [x] Built with animating route transitions in mind
- [x] Use the Web Animations API or CSS classes to animate
- [x] Route and animate multiple sections of the page
- [x] Hash Routing
- [x] Minimal Polyfilling necessary (Just
Object.assign()
,Promise
and possiblyElement.animate()
, for IE11 and newer)
Backstory
In my experience of using animations with React Router and other Single Page App routing solutions, the work to add animation transitions on changing routes was a lot more complicated than just regular routing. I also was inspired by the Web Animations API and decided to create my own flavor of a Router, one that treats animations as first class citizens.
Anyway, thanks for checking this library out. If you end up using Smoothr in production, let me know and I'll add a link here in the README.
May your single page routing animations be smoother, with Smoothr... (pardon the cheesyness)
Getting Started
Prerequisites
- React 16.3.0 or higher
- Support for
Object.assign()
andPromise
in Javascript - Any necessary polyfills for the Web Animations API This one gets the job done well.
Installation
$ npm install --save smoothr
or
$ yarn add smoothr
Minimal Example Usage
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
// Bring in the Smoothr components
import { Smoothr, SmoothRoutes, Route, Link } from 'smoothr';
const Page = props => <section>{props.message}</section>;
const App = () => (
<Smoothr>
<div>
{/* Link is our wrapper around anchors for Smoothr navigation */}
<Link href="/">Home</Link>
<Link href="/anotherpage">Another Page</Link>
</div>
<div>
<SmoothRoutes>
<Route
path="/"
component={Page}
// Use the Web Animations API, first argument of Element.animate()
animationIn={[{ opacity: 0 }, { opacity: 1 }]}
animationOut={[{ opacity: 1 }, { opacity: 0 }]}
// and the second argument of Element.animate()
animationOpts={{
duration: 750,
easing: 'ease-in-out'
}}
// Any other props will be passed to `component`
message="Welcome to the homepage!"
/>
<Route
path="/anotherpage"
component={Page}
// Use CSS classes for animating
animationIn={'fadeInCSSClassName'}
animationOut={'fadeOutCSSClassName'}
message="Welcome to the other page!"
/>
<Route
// The `notFound` prop designates a route, path, and component for 404 page
notFound
path="/notfound"
component={Page}
message="404 Error!"
/>
</SmoothRoutes>
</div>
</Smoothr>
);
For a more complete example, check out the demo and its source code. If you want to play around with this example, see the setup instructions in the Contributing section.
API Documentation
<Smoothr>
Usage:
The <Smoothr>
component just needs to be used up the tree of any <Link>
s or <SmoothRoutes>
. I recommend having it at the top level of your Single Page App. <Smoothr>
props are the top-level configuration for all routing.
Available props: (* indicates a required prop)
beforeAnimation
- (function) - This method is the entry point into knowing what's going on with the Smoothr routing. It is used in aPromise
which will resolve before starting the animation to ensure the completion of any asynchonous state changes before animating. Use it to change local state in order to conditionally set the upcoming animation. Example:
beforeAnimation = ({
// Url's are the exact urls
outgoingUrl,
incomingUrl,
// Routes are the original matching routes, as set in the <Route /> components
outgoingRoute,
incomingRoute,
// If the user nagivated with the "back" button in the browser (boolean)
backNavigation
}) => {
// Set local state in order to configure upcoming <Route> animation props
// ...
};
onAnimationStart
- (function) - This function will run right before the animation begins. Use it to imperitively kick off transition animations. If you want to kick off an animation based on incoming or outgoing routes, usebeforeAnimation
to set some state, and then use that state in this method.onAnimationEnd
- (function) - This takes place after the animation is finished. Tell your app that it's done animating, reset some configuration saved in state, or do something else. There are no arguments passed.originPath
- (string) - The path after the domain to the origin of this single page app. This includes the beginning backslash, but not the trailing backslash. This will be set once and cannot be updated. All of the<Link>
href
properties will be relative to that origin path. For hash routing, set this to"/#"
or something else ending with a hash (#
), and that's it! Example:"/smoothr-app"
, and<Link href="/page1" />
will link to"/smoothr-app/page1"
. This defaults to an empty string, which signifies the document root.
<SmoothRoutes>
Usage:
Imagine <SmoothRoutes>
as a regular DOM element that changes when the url changes. Its children MUST be <Route>
components. You can use as many of these on the page as you want. Often you'll want to wrap each <SmoothRoutes>
component in a wrapper DOM element with some CSS rules or a MutationObserver to set its size.
Available props:
Each of these props are identical to their <Route>
counterparts. They will be applied to all routes if set at the <SmoothRoutes>
level, but if a <Route>
has an animation prop, the logic will favor the props set on the <Route>
at transition time.
animationIn
- (Element.animate()keyframes
argument, or string indicatingclassName
)animationOut
- (Element.animate()keyframes
argument, or string indicatingclassName
)animationOpts
- (Element.animate()options
argument)reverseAnimationIn
- (Element.animate()keyframes
argument, or string indicatingclassName
)reverseAnimationOut
- (Element.animate()keyframes
argument, or string indicatingclassName
)reverseAnimationOpts
- (Element.animate()options
argument)
<Route>
Usage:
Most of the actual animation configuration takes place on the <Route>
level. Animations are set by the props of the <Route>
that is being transitioned in. The reverseAnimation
prop equivalents take precedence when the user nagivates back with the "back" button in their browser, but aren't required.
Available props: (* indicates a required prop)
component
* - (React Component) - The component that you want to be rendered when the URL matches a given path.path
* - (string) - When the url matches thepath
of your<Route>
, it will render to the page. Variabled routes are supported, and can be indicated with a colon (:
). The value of that variable will be passed down as a prop by the name in the path to the renderedcomponent
. Example of usingpath
with variables:
<Route path="/users/:id" component={UsersPage} />
// If the url is "/users/12345", the following will be rendered:
<UsersPage id="12345">
pathResolve
- (function) - Use this function to validate and modify the variables passed when this<Route>
is navigated to. The return value must match the pattern of the path. If it doesn't, thenotFound
path will be used. This will only work if thepath
component has variables. Example, which can by tested on the live demo:
<Route
path="/color/:red/:green/:blue"
pathResolve={({red, green, blue}) => {
// Ensure they're all numeric
if(isNaN(red) || isNaN(green) || isNaN(blue)) {
// Return anything not matching the `path` pattern to trigger a 404
return false;
}
// Make sure they're all valid RGB values
red = Math.min(Math.abs(parseInt(red)), 255);
green = Math.min(Math.abs(parseInt(green)), 255);
blue = Math.min(Math.abs(parseInt(blue)), 255);
// Return the resolved url
return `/color/${red}/${green}/${blue}`;
}}
// ...
/>
animationIn
- (Element.animate()keyframes
argument, or string indicatingclassName
) - The value of this prop corresponds to the first argument of theElement.animate()
method, or a css class name, which will be applied to the<Route>
DOM element during the duration of the animation. If this isn't passed, then no animation will occur, but be aware that the incoming<Route>
won't show up until the duration ends, as set in theanimationOpts
prop of either the<SmoothRoutes>
or<Route>
component.animationOut
- (Element.animate()keyframes
argument, or string indicatingclassName
) - Similiar toanimationIn
, but is applied to the outgoing<Route>
animationOpts
- (Element.animate()options
argument) - This corresponds to the second argument of theElement.animate()
method. These options are applied to both the incoming and outgoing<Route>
s during transition. If using a CSS class transition, then any other options passed to an object besidesduration
will be ignored. If this prop is not set, the animation duration will default to 0.
NOTE: There are a couple of nuances to how Smoothr uses the options
argument of Element.animate()
.
fill
is always set toforwards
iterations
cannot be set toInfinity
.
reverseAnimationIn
- (Element.animate()keyframes
argument, or string indicatingclassName
) - Same as theanimationIn
but happens when the user nagivates back with the "back" button in their browser.reverseAnimationOut
- (Element.animate()keyframes
argument, or string indicatingclassName
) - Reverse equivalent of theanimationOut
prop.reverseAnimationOpts
- (Element.animate()options
argument) - Reverse equivalent of theanimationOpts
prop.notFound
- (No type, just set the prop) - This designates apath
andcomponent
to show when the URL doesn't match any of the other paths. If you have multiple<SmoothRoutes>
sections, the<Route>
s flagged with this prop must have matchingpath
s. (Only one "not found" url path can exist.)- Any other props that are set will be passed down to the rendered
component
.
<Link>
Usage:
Links are wrappers around anchor (<a>
) tags. The library adds the prop data-smoothr-current-link="true"
when the href
matches the current URL, and the data-smoothr-visited-link
property to simulate the css :visited
rule. When styling, use these data-attributes in your css rules, like so
a[data-smoothr-current-link="true"] {
/* some style to show the currently opened link here */
}
a:visited,
a[data-smoothr-visited-link="true"] {
/* some style to show a visited link here */
}
Available props: (* indicates a required prop)
href
* - (string) - Same as anchor tagonClick
- (function) - This is self-explanatoryfuzzyCurrent
- (No type, just set the prop) - If is prop is set, thedata-smoothr-current-link
property will be added to the link if the route matches the current variabled route. By default, only exact url matches will have thedata-smoothr-current-link
property added.fuzzyVisited
- (No type, just set the prop) - Similiar to thefuzzyCurrent
prop, but related to visited links. If the user visits a Route with a matching variable pattern, thedata-smoothr-visited-link
property will be added.- Any other props that are set will be passed down to the rendered anchor tag.
To do list before version 1.0.0:
- [x] Release initial build to NPM
- [x] Add ability to validate and mask URL variables on navigation
- [x] Test on Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge and IE11.
- [x] Handle visited links and current links better
- [x] Remove glitchiness around interrupted animations
- [x] Add hash routing
- [x] General cleanup
- [ ] Test on Edge and IE11.
- [ ] Add prop checks with
PropTypes
- [ ] Test app in Preact/add Preact support
- [ ] Remove need to polyfill
Object.assign
and possiblyPromise
- [ ] Optimization
- [ ] Add more animations to the demo page
Contributing
I plan on maintaining this library. For bugs and enhancements, just add an issue and/or send pull request my way, and I'll review it! I'm definitely open to improvements.
Setup
You can set up your development environment and use the example app as a test app by running the following commands:
$ git clone https://github.com/n8jadams/smoothr.git
$ cd smoothr
$ yarn install
$ yarn build
$ cd example
$ yarn install
$ yarn start
and then when you want to reload the package, from the smoothr
directory
$ yarn build
It may take a while to download the dev dependencies.
Contributors
| Nate Adams💻 🎨 📖 💡 🤔 📦 | Morgan Kartchner🤔 🚇 | | :---: | :---: |
License
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details
Acknowledgments
- Big thanks to Morgan Kartchner for the mentoring and contributions to the Dayzed library, which I used as a guide in setting up this lib.
- The folks at MDN for writing up the Web Animations API documentation
- You, for checking out this library! Thanks!