A JavaScript library to draw and animate SVG path strokes.
See the DEMO.
Read this article to understand how it works.
HTML
Add the segment script, and define a path
somewhere.
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/segment-js/1.1.3/segment.js"></script>
<svg>
<path id="my-path" ...>
</svg>
JavaScript
Initialize a new Segment
with the path
. Then draw a segment of stroke every time you want with: .draw(begin, end, duration, options)
.
var myPath = document.getElementById("my-path"),
segment = new Segment(myPath);
segment.draw("25%", "75% - 10", 1);
npm install segment-js
The Segment
constructor asks for 4 parameters:
- path: DOM element to draw.
- begin (optional, default
0
): Length to start drawing the stroke. - end (optional, default
100%
): Length to finish drawing the stroke. - circular (optional, default
false
): Allowbegin
andend
values less than 0 and greater than 100%.
Name | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
begin |
string | 0 | Path length to start drawing. |
end |
string | 100% | Path length to finish drawing. |
duration |
float | 0 | Duration (in seconds) of the animation. |
options |
object | null | Options for animation in object notation. |
Note that begin
and end
can be negative values and can be written in any of these ways:
- floatValue
- percent
- percent + floatValue
- percent - floatValue
Name | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
delay |
float | 0 | Waiting time (in seconds) to start drawing. |
easing |
function | linear | Easing function (normalized). I highly recommend d3-ease. |
circular |
boolean | false | If true , when the stroke reaches the end of the path it will resume at the beginning. The same applies in the opposite direction. |
callback |
function | null | Function to call when the animation is done. |
Example
function cubicIn(t) {
return t * t * t;
}
function done() {
alert("Done!");
}
segment.draw("-25%", "75% - 10", 1, {delay: 0.5, easing: cubicIn, circular: true, callback: done});
It's possible to animate the path stroke using another JavaScript library, like GSAP. Segments
offers a method called strokeDasharray
that is useful for this issue.
Here is an example using TweenLite (with CSSPlugin).
TweenLite.to(path, 1, { strokeDasharray: segment.strokeDasharray(begin, end) });