Issue
I have a loading image which comes up during an Ajax load event. The image shows/hides by adding or removing a "loading" class to the body element. Currently, the loading image animates background-size from 0 to 100%, and fades in the opacity (vice versa for the 'return' transition).
I want to have the background-size transition happen instantly (not transition) on the fade out, so:
Fade in: opacity from 0 to 1 in .2s, background size from 0 to 100% in .2s
Fade out: opacity from 1 to 0 in .2s, background size from 100% to 0 should happen instantly
#loader { width: 100%; height: 100%; position: fixed; top: 0; left: 0; z-index: -1; opacity: 0; -moz-opacity: 0; transition: all .2s ease-in-out } #loader .image { width: 400px; height: 138px; display: block; position: absolute; z-index: 2000; top: 50%; left: 50%; margin: 0; background: url(assets/images/loading.png) no-repeat; background-size: 0 0; transition: all .2s ease-in-out; -webkit-animation: pulse 400ms ease-out infinite alternate; -moz-animation: pulse 400ms ease-out infinite alternate; -o-animation: pulse 400ms ease-out infinite alternate; animation: pulse 400ms ease-out infinite alternate } .loading #loader {z-index: 1000; background-color: rgba(255,255,255,.7)} .loading #loader .image { background-size: 100% 100%; margin: -69px 0 0 -200px; transition: opacity .2s ease-in-out }
I've changed transition property for this selector .loading #loader .image
to "opacity" rather than "all", but it still performs the background-size transition.
Does anyone know how to achieve the different fade in and fade out transitions described above with CSS?
Solution
Here is a simplified test case:
div {
background: blue;
opacity: 0;
transition: opacity 2s ease-in-out;
}
div.loading {
opacity: 1;
background: red;
transition: opacity 2s ease-in-out, background 1s ease-in;
}
Notice how the opacity
fades the same in and out, but the background
only fades in, and immediately turns blue on fade out.
I used :hover
as an example, but it should work the same when adding and removing classes with JavaScript.
If you'd like a more specific example please provide a reduced test case on dabblet or Jsfiddle.
Answered By - bookcasey
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