Please note, this is a STATIC archive of website developer.mozilla.org from 03 Nov 2016, cach3.com does not collect or store any user information, there is no "phishing" involved.

@keyframes

This translation is incomplete. Please help translate this article from English.

This is an experimental technology
Because this technology's specification has not stabilized, check the compatibility table for usage in various browsers. Also note that the syntax and behavior of an experimental technology is subject to change in future versions of browsers as the specification changes.

Summary

The @keyframes CSS at-rule lets authors control the intermediate steps in a CSS animation sequence by establishing keyframes (or waypoints) along the animation sequence that must be reached by certain points during the animation. This gives you more specific control over the intermediate steps of the animation sequence than you get when letting the browser handle everything automatically.

The @keyframes at-rule can be accessed via the CSS object model interface CSSKeyframesRule.

To use keyframes, you create a @keyframes rule with a name that is then used by the animation-name property to match an animation to its keyframe list. Each @keyframes rule contains a style list of keyframe selectors, each of which is comprised of a percentage along the animation at which the keyframe occurs as well as a block containing the style information for that keyframe.

You can list the keyframes in any order; they will be handled in the order in which their specified percentages indicate they should occur.

Valid keyframe lists

In order for a keyframe list to be valid, it must include rules for at least the times 0% (or from) and 100% (or to) (that is, the starting and ending states of the animation). If both of these time offsets aren't specified, the keyframe declaration is invalid and can't be used for animation.

If you include properties that can't be animated in your keyframe rules, they get ignored, but the supported properties will still be animated.

Duplicate resolution

If multiple keyframe sets exist for a given name, the last one encountered is used. @keyframes rules don't cascade, so animations never drive keyframes from more than one rule set.

If a given animation time offset is duplicated, the last keyframe in the @keyframes rule for that percentage is used for that frame. There's no cascading within a @keyframes rule if multiple keyframes specify the same percentage values.

When properties are left out of some keyframes

Any properties that you don't specify in every keyframe are interpolated (with the exception of those that can't be interpolated, which are instead dropped from the animation entirely). For example:

@keyframes identifier {
  0% { top: 0; left: 0; }
  30% { top: 50px; }
  68%, 72% { left: 50px; }
  100% { top: 100px; left: 100%; }
}

Here, the top property animates using the 0%, 30%, and 100% keyframes, and left animates using the 0%, 68%, and 100% keyframes.

Only properties that are specified in both the 0% and 100% keyframes will be animated; any property not included in both of those keyframes will retain their starting value for the duration of the animation sequence.

When a keyframe is defined multiple times

The specification defines that if a keyframe is defined multiple times but not all properties affected are specified in each keyframe, only the values specified in the latest keyframe are considered. For example:

@keyframes identifier {
  0% { top: 0; }
  50% { top: 30px; left: 20px; }
  50% { top: 10px; }
  100% { top: 0; }
}

In this example, at the 50% keyframe, the value used is top: 10px and all other values at this keyframe are ignored.

!important in a keyframe

Declarations in a keyframe that are qualified with !important are ignored

@keyframes important1 {
  from { margin-top: 50px; }
  50%  { margin-top: 150px !important; } /* ignored */
  to   { margin-top: 100px; }
}

@keyframes important2 {
  from { margin-top: 50px;
         margin-bottom: 100px; }
  to   { margin-top: 150px !important; /* ignored */
         margin-bottom: 50px; }
}

  Cascading keyframes are supported starting in Firefox 14. For the example above, it means that at the 50% keyframe, the value left: 20px will be considered. This is not defined in the specification yet, but it is being discussed.

Syntax

@keyframes <identifier> {
  [ [ from | to | <percentage> ] [, from | to | <percentage> ]* block ]*
}

Values

<identifier>
A name identifying the keyframe list. This must match the identifier production in CSS syntax.
from
A starting offset of 0%.
to
An ending offset of 100%.
<percentage>
A percentage of the time through the animation sequence at which the specified keyframe should occur.

Examples

See CSS animations for examples.

Specifications

Specification Status Comment
CSS Animations
The definition of '@keyframes' in that specification.
Working Draft  

Browser compatibility

Feature Chrome Firefox (Gecko) Internet Explorer Opera Safari (WebKit)
Basic support (Yes)-webkit 5.0 (5.0)-moz
16.0 (16.0)
10 12 -o
12.10 #
4.0-webkit
ignore !important declarations ? 19 (19) ? ? ?
Feature Android Firefox Mobile (Gecko) IE Phone Opera Mobile Safari Mobile
Basic support (Yes)-webkit 5.0 (5.0)-moz
16.0 (16.0)
? ? ?
ignore !important declarations ? 19.0 (19) ? ? ?

Notes

  1. @keyframes not supported in an inline or scoped stylesheet in Firefox  (bug 830056).

See also

Document Tags and Contributors

 Contributors to this page: Sebastianz, fscholz, melomuxa
 Last updated by: Sebastianz,