In the previous tutorial, we’ve covered how to create some cool page transitions using Barba.js and the CSS plugin. Today we will break down some the of terms associated with Barbas page transitions logic.
This will help you to trigger the right transition at the right time.
Include @barba/core, @barba/css plugin in your JavaScript module, and tell Barba to use the CSS plugin.
// install via npm or yarn
npm install @barba/core @barba/css
yarn add @barba/core @barba/css
// Include Barba and Barba CSS in your project
import barba from '@barba/core';
import barbaCss from '@barba/css';
// Tell Barba to use the CSS plugin
barba.use(barbaCss);
// Initiate Barba
barba.init();
<body data-barba="wrapper">
<!-- content that stays the same on all pages - eg. header -->
<div data-barba="container">
<!-- content that will change from page to page -->
</div>
<!-- content that stays the same on all pages - eg. footer -->
</div>
Barba.js will now add and remove specific CSS classes from the data-barba="container".
These CSS classes will be based on the transitions that we need to specify.
If you are completely new to Barba.js, you can check this tutorial to learn more about the required HTML markup.
How to create fade-in transition on page load
To create a simple fade in transition on page load we can use the once hook.
barba.init({
transitions: [
{
once() {}
}
]
});
Barba.js will add and remove the following CSS classes .barba-once, .barba-once-active and .barba-once-to during the transition.
.barba-once and .barba-once-active will be applied at the start of the transition.
.barba-once-active and .barba-once-to will be applied during the transition.
This hook is called once, because this transition only runs once on the page load.
When the CSS transition is completed, all CSS classes will be removed from the container.
How long these classes stay on the container depends on the duration of the CSS transition or animation.
Because the CSS plugin overrides the main once hook, any code inside of once will be ignored. The same applies to the enter and leave hooks.
barba.init({
transitions: [
{
once() {
console.log('this will be ignored');
},
beforeOnce() {
console.log('shows up BEFORE once transition');
},
afterOnce() {
console.log('shows up AFTER once transition');
}
}
]
});
If you need to run any code related to the once transition use beforeOnce or afterOnce hooks.
How to customize the name of the CSS class?
You can customize the CSS classes by specifying a name for your transition.
transitions: [
{
name: "home",
once() {}
}
]
If you specify home as the name, Barba will generate these classes:
.home-once
.home-once-active
.home-once-to
The format of the class is always the same: .[name]-[hook]-[state].
How to create CSS transition between two pages
Every page transition has two phases.
Firstly the current page leaves, then the next page enters.
To use CSS transitions between two pages, we need to specify the hooks inside of the Barba transition, even if there is no code inside of them.
Perfect, this was a simple fade transition, but what if wanted to make a transition where both containers are visible on the page? How would we do that with Barba.js?
Let’s see in the next example.
How to create clip-path transition
Now that you know the basics of Barba.js and the CSS plugin, only your imagination is your limit!
In the next example, we will try to reveal the next page from the center of the screen.
We will clip the incoming page clip-path: circle(0%); at the start and reveal it by specifying clip-path: circle(75%); as the end of the transition.
For this effect, we need to have both containers on the page and Barba has a sync mode build-in exactly for that.
This is a simple full-screen element covering the whole viewport, by default it is positioned outside of the viewport using transform: translateY(-100%);.
In the first phase, we are transitioning the .transition element to translateY(0) using the .with-cover-leave-to .transition selector. This is also the starting position for the enter animation.
Then we are moving the .transition out of the viewport to transform: translateY(100%); using the .with-cover-enter-to .transition selector.
As you can see, the stylesheet could grow quite quickly.
At the start of the transition, we are using .slide-enter CSS class to position the incoming next page outside of the viewport.
Then we are animating both containers by 100%. The current page goes away from the viewport to translateX(100%) and the next page moves to translateX(0).
The page entering the viewport is positioned absolute during the transition as we have defined in the .slide-enter-to CSS class.
And that is it, now you have learned how to create 4 different page transitions using Barba.js and the CSS Plugin.