Making Calendars With Accessibility and Internationalization in Mind

Doing a quick search here on CSS-Tricks shows just how many different ways there are to approach calendars. Some show how CSS Grid can create the layout efficiently. Some attempt to bring actual data into the mix. Some rely on a framework to help with state management.

There are many considerations when building a calendar component — far more than what is covered in the articles I linked up. If you think about it, calendars are fraught with nuance, from handling timezones and date formats to localization and even making sure dates flow from one month to the next… and that’s before we even get into accessibility and additional layout considerations depending on where the calendar is displayed and whatnot.

Many developers fear the Date() object and stick with older libraries like moment.js. But while there are many “gotchas” when it comes to dates and formatting, JavaScript has a lot of cool APIs and stuff to help out!

January 2023 calendar grid.

I don’t want to re-create the wheel here, but I will show you how we can get a dang good calendar with vanilla JavaScript. We’ll look into accessibility, using semantic markup and screenreader-friendly <time> -tags — as well as internationalization and formatting, using the Intl.Locale, Intl.DateTimeFormat and Intl.NumberFormat-APIs.

In other words, we’re making a calendar… only without the extra dependencies you might typically see used in a tutorial like this, and with some of the nuances you might not typically see. And, in the process, I hope you’ll gain a new appreciation for newer things that JavaScript can do while getting an idea of the sorts of things that cross my mind when I’m putting something like this together.

First off, naming

What should we call our calendar component? In my native language, it would be called “kalender element”, so let’s use that and shorten that to “Kal-El” — also known as Superman’s name on the planet Krypton.

Let’s create a function to get things going:

function kalEl(settings = {}) { ... }

This method will render a single month. Later we’ll call this method from [...Array(12).keys()] to render an entire year.

Initial data and internationalization

One of the common things a typical online calendar does is highlight the current date. So let’s create a reference for that:

const today = new Date();

Next, we’ll create a “configuration object” that we’ll merge with the optional settings object of the primary method:

const config = Object.assign(
  {
    locale: (document.documentElement.getAttribute('lang') || 'en-US'), 
    today: { 
      day: today.getDate(),
      month: today.getMonth(),
      year: today.getFullYear() 
    } 
  }, settings
);

We check, if the root element (<html>) contains a lang-attribute with locale info; otherwise, we’ll fallback to using en-US. This is the first step toward internationalizing the calendar.

We also need to determine which month to initially display when the calendar is rendered. That’s why we extended the config object with the primary date. This way, if no date is provided in the settings object, we’ll use the today reference instead:

const date = config.date ? new Date(config.date) : today;

We need a little more info to properly format the calendar based on locale. For example, we might not know whether the first day of the week is Sunday or Monday, depending on the locale. If we have the info, great! But if not, we’ll update it using the Intl.Locale API. The API has a weekInfo object that returns a firstDay property that gives us exactly what we’re looking for without any hassle. We can also get which days of the week are assigned to the weekend:

if (!config.info) config.info = new Intl.Locale(config.locale).weekInfo || { 
  firstDay: 7,
  weekend: [6, 7] 
};

Again, we create fallbacks. The “first day” of the week for en-US is Sunday, so it defaults to a value of 7. This is a little confusing, as the getDay method in JavaScript returns the days as [0-6], where 0 is Sunday… don’t ask me why. The weekends are Saturday and Sunday, hence [6, 7].

Before we had the Intl.Locale API and its weekInfo method, it was pretty hard to create an international calendar without many **objects and arrays with information about each locale or region. Nowadays, it’s easy-peasy. If we pass in en-GB, the method returns:

// en-GB
{
  firstDay: 1,
  weekend: [6, 7],
  minimalDays: 4
}

In a country like Brunei (ms-BN), the weekend is Friday and Sunday:

// ms-BN
{
  firstDay: 7,
  weekend: [5, 7],
  minimalDays: 1
}

You might wonder what that minimalDays property is. That’s the fewest days required in the first week of a month to be counted as a full week. In some regions, it might be just one day. For others, it might be a full seven days.

Next, we’ll create a render method within our kalEl-method:

const render = (date, locale) => { ... }

We still need some more data to work with before we render anything:

const month = date.getMonth();
const year = date.getFullYear();
const numOfDays = new Date(year, month + 1, 0).getDate();
const renderToday = (year === config.today.year) && (month === config.today.month);

The last one is a Boolean that checks whether today exists in the month we’re about to render.

Semantic markup

We’re going to get deeper in rendering in just a moment. But first, I want to make sure that the details we set up have semantic HTML tags associated with them. Setting that up right out of the box gives us accessibility benefits from the start.

Calendar wrapper

First, we have the non-semantic wrapper: <kal-el>. That’s fine because there isn’t a semantic <calendar> tag or anything like that. If we weren’t making a custom element, <article> might be the most appropriate element since the calendar could stand on its own page.

Month names

The <time> element is going to be a big one for us because it helps translate dates into a format that screenreaders and search engines can parse more accurately and consistently. For example, here’s how we can convey “January 2023” in our markup:

<time datetime="2023-01">January <i>2023</i></time>

Day names

The row above the calendar’s dates containing the names of the days of the week can be tricky. It’s ideal if we can write out the full names for each day — e.g. Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, etc. — but that can take up a lot of space. So, let’s abbreviate the names for now inside of an <ol> where each day is a <li>:

<ol>
  <li><abbr title="Sunday">Sun</abbr></li>
  <li><abbr title="Monday">Mon</abbr></li>
  <!-- etc. -->
</ol>

We could get tricky with CSS to get the best of both worlds. For example, if we modified the markup a bit like this:

<ol>
  <li>
    <abbr title="S">Sunday</abbr>
  </li>
</ol>

…we get the full names by default. We can then “hide” the full name when space runs out and display the title attribute instead:

@media all and (max-width: 800px) {
  li abbr::after {
    content: attr(title);
  }
}

But, we’re not going that way because the Intl.DateTimeFormat API can help here as well. We’ll get to that in the next section when we cover rendering.

Day numbers

Each date in the calendar grid gets a number. Each number is a list item (<li>) in an ordered list (<ol>), and the inline <time> tag wraps the actual number.

<li>
  <time datetime="2023-01-01">1</time>
</li>

And while I’m not planning to do any styling just yet, I know I will want some way to style the date numbers. That’s possible as-is, but I also want to be able to style weekday numbers differently than weekend numbers if I need to. So, I’m going to include data-* attributes specifically for that: data-weekend and data-today.

Week numbers

There are 52 weeks in a year, sometimes 53. While it’s not super common, it can be nice to display the number for a given week in the calendar for additional context. I like having it now, even if I don’t wind up not using it. But we’ll totally use it in this tutorial.

We’ll use a data-weeknumber attribute as a styling hook and include it in the markup for each date that is the week’s first date.

<li data-day="7" data-weeknumber="1" data-weekend="">
  <time datetime="2023-01-08">8</time>
</li>

Rendering

Let’s get the calendar on a page! We already know that <kal-el> is the name of our custom element. First thing we need to configure it is to set the firstDay property on it, so the calendar knows whether Sunday or some other day is the first day of the week.

<kal-el data-firstday="${ config.info.firstDay }">

We’ll be using template literals to render the markup. To format the dates for an international audience, we’ll use the Intl.DateTimeFormat API, again using the locale we specified earlier.

The month and year

When we call the month, we can set whether we want to use the long name (e.g. February) or the short name (e.g. Feb.). Let’s use the long name since it’s the title above the calendar:

<time datetime="${year}-${(pad(month))}">
  ${new Intl.DateTimeFormat(
    locale,
    { month:'long'}).format(date)} <i>${year}</i>
</time>

Weekday names

For weekdays displayed above the grid of dates, we need both the long (e.g. “Sunday”) and short (abbreviated, ie. “Sun”) names. This way, we can use the “short” name when the calendar is short on space:

Intl.DateTimeFormat([locale], { weekday: 'long' })
Intl.DateTimeFormat([locale], { weekday: 'short' })

Let’s make a small helper method that makes it a little easier to call each one:

const weekdays = (firstDay, locale) => {
  const date = new Date(0);
  const arr = [...Array(7).keys()].map(i => {
    date.setDate(5 + i)
    return {
      long: new Intl.DateTimeFormat([locale], { weekday: 'long'}).format(date),
      short: new Intl.DateTimeFormat([locale], { weekday: 'short'}).format(date)
    }
  })
  for (let i = 0; i < 8 - firstDay; i++) arr.splice(0, 0, arr.pop());
  return arr;
}

Here’s how we invoke that in the template:

<ol>
  ${weekdays(config.info.firstDay,locale).map(name => `
    <li>
      <abbr title="${name.long}">${name.short}</abbr>
    </li>`).join('')
  }
</ol>

Day numbers

And finally, the days, wrapped in an <ol> element:

${[...Array(numOfDays).keys()].map(i => {
  const cur = new Date(year, month, i + 1);
  let day = cur.getDay(); if (day === 0) day = 7;
  const today = renderToday && (config.today.day === i + 1) ? ' data-today':'';
  return `
    <li data-day="${day}"${today}${i === 0 || day === config.info.firstDay ? ` data-weeknumber="${new Intl.NumberFormat(locale).format(getWeek(cur))}"`:''}${config.info.weekend.includes(day) ? ` data-weekend`:''}>
      <time datetime="${year}-${(pad(month))}-${pad(i)}" tabindex="0">
        ${new Intl.NumberFormat(locale).format(i + 1)}
      </time>
    </li>`
}).join('')}

Let’s break that down:

  1. We create a “dummy” array, based on the “number of days” variable, which we’ll use to iterate.
  2. We create a day variable for the current day in the iteration.
  3. We fix the discrepancy between the Intl.Locale API and getDay().
  4. If the day is equal to today, we add a data-* attribute.
  5. Finally, we return the <li> element as a string with merged data.
  6. tabindex="0" makes the element focusable, when using keyboard navigation, after any positive tabindex values (Note: you should never add positive tabindex-values)

To “pad” the numbers in the datetime attribute, we use a little helper method:

const pad = (val) => (val + 1).toString().padStart(2, '0');

Week number

Again, the “week number” is where a week falls in a 52-week calendar. We use a little helper method for that as well:

function getWeek(cur) {
  const date = new Date(cur.getTime());
  date.setHours(0, 0, 0, 0);
  date.setDate(date.getDate() + 3 - (date.getDay() + 6) % 7);
  const week = new Date(date.getFullYear(), 0, 4);
  return 1 + Math.round(((date.getTime() - week.getTime()) / 86400000 - 3 + (week.getDay() + 6) % 7) / 7);
}

I didn’t write this getWeek-method. It’s a cleaned up version of this script.

And that’s it! Thanks to the Intl.Locale, Intl.DateTimeFormat and Intl.NumberFormat APIs, we can now simply change the lang-attribute of the <html> element to change the context of the calendar based on the current region:

January 2023 calendar grid.
de-DE
January 2023 calendar grid.
fa-IR
January 2023 calendar grid.
zh-Hans-CN-u-nu-hanidec

Styling the calendar

You might recall how all the days are just one <ol> with list items. To style these into a readable calendar, we dive into the wonderful world of CSS Grid. In fact, we can repurpose the same grid from a starter calendar template right here on CSS-Tricks, but updated a smidge with the :is() relational pseudo to optimize the code.

Notice that I’m defining configurable CSS variables along the way (and prefixing them with ---kalel- to avoid conflicts).

kal-el :is(ol, ul) {
  display: grid;
  font-size: var(--kalel-fz, small);
  grid-row-gap: var(--kalel-row-gap, .33em);
  grid-template-columns: var(--kalel-gtc, repeat(7, 1fr));
  list-style: none;
  margin: unset;
  padding: unset;
  position: relative;
}
Seven-column calendar grid with grid lines shown.

Let’s draw borders around the date numbers to help separate them visually:

kal-el :is(ol, ul) li {
  border-color: var(--kalel-li-bdc, hsl(0, 0%, 80%));
  border-style: var(--kalel-li-bds, solid);
  border-width: var(--kalel-li-bdw, 0 0 1px 0);
  grid-column: var(--kalel-li-gc, initial);
  text-align: var(--kalel-li-tal, end); 
}

The seven-column grid works fine when the first day of the month is also the first day of the week for the selected locale). But that’s the exception rather than the rule. Most times, we’ll need to shift the first day of the month to a different weekday.

Showing the first day of the month falling on a Thursday.

Remember all the extra data-* attributes we defined when writing our markup? We can hook into those to update which grid column (--kalel-li-gc) the first date number of the month is placed on:

[data-firstday="1"] [data-day="3"]:first-child {
  --kalel-li-gc: 1 / 4;
}

In this case, we’re spanning from the first grid column to the fourth grid column — which will automatically “push” the next item (Day 2) to the fifth grid column, and so forth.

Let’s add a little style to the “current” date, so it stands out. These are just my styles. You can totally do what you’d like here.

[data-today] {
  --kalel-day-bdrs: 50%;
  --kalel-day-bg: hsl(0, 86%, 40%);
  --kalel-day-hover-bgc: hsl(0, 86%, 70%);
  --kalel-day-c: #fff;
}

I like the idea of styling the date numbers for weekends differently than weekdays. I’m going to use a reddish color to style those. Note that we can reach for the :not() pseudo-class to select them while leaving the current date alone:

[data-weekend]:not([data-today]) { 
  --kalel-day-c: var(--kalel-weekend-c, hsl(0, 86%, 46%));
}

Oh, and let’s not forget the week numbers that go before the first date number of each week. We used a data-weeknumber attribute in the markup for that, but the numbers won’t actually display unless we reveal them with CSS, which we can do on the ::before pseudo-element:

[data-weeknumber]::before {
  display: var(--kalel-weeknumber-d, inline-block);
  content: attr(data-weeknumber);
  position: absolute;
  inset-inline-start: 0;
  /* additional styles */
}

We’re technically done at this point! We can render a calendar grid that shows the dates for the current month, complete with considerations for localizing the data by locale, and ensuring that the calendar uses proper semantics. And all we used was vanilla JavaScript and CSS!

But let’s take this one more step

Rendering an entire year

Maybe you need to display a full year of dates! So, rather than render the current month, you might want to display all of the month grids for the current year.

Well, the nice thing about the approach we’re using is that we can call the render method as many times as we want and merely change the integer that identifies the month on each instance. Let’s call it 12 times based on the current year.

as simple as calling the render-method 12 times, and just change the integer for monthi:

[...Array(12).keys()].map(i =>
  render(
    new Date(date.getFullYear(),
    i,
    date.getDate()),
    config.locale,
    date.getMonth()
  )
).join('')

It’s probably a good idea to create a new parent wrapper for the rendered year. Each calendar grid is a <kal-el> element. Let’s call the new parent wrapper <jor-el>, where Jor-El is the name of Kal-El’s father.

<jor-el id="app" data-year="true">
  <kal-el data-firstday="7">
    <!-- etc. -->
  </kal-el>

  <!-- other months -->
</jor-el>

We can use <jor-el> to create a grid for our grids. So meta!

jor-el {
  background: var(--jorel-bg, none);
  display: var(--jorel-d, grid);
  gap: var(--jorel-gap, 2.5rem);
  grid-template-columns: var(--jorel-gtc, repeat(auto-fill, minmax(320px, 1fr)));
  padding: var(--jorel-p, 0);
}

Final demo

Bonus: Confetti Calendar

I read an excellent book called Making and Breaking the Grid the other day and stumbled on this beautiful “New Year’s poster”:

Source: Making and Breaking the Grid (2nd Edition) by Timothy Samara

I figured we could do something similar without changing anything in the HTML or JavaScript. I’ve taken the liberty to include full names for months, and numbers instead of day names, to make it more readable. Enjoy!


Making Calendars With Accessibility and Internationalization in Mind originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the DigitalOcean family. You should get the newsletter.

Creating a Clock with the New CSS sin() and cos() Trigonometry Functions

CSS trigonometry functions are here! Well, they are if you’re using the latest versions of Firefox and Safari, that is. Having this sort of mathematical power in CSS opens up a whole bunch of possibilities. In this tutorial, I thought we’d dip our toes in the water to get a feel for a couple of the newer functions: sin() and cos().

There are other trigonometry functions in the pipeline — including tan() — so why focus just on sin() and cos()? They happen to be perfect for the idea I have in mind, which is to place text along the edge of a circle. That’s been covered here on CSS-Tricks when Chris shared an approach that uses a Sass mixin. That was six years ago, so let’s give it the bleeding edge treatment.

Here’s what I have in mind. Again, it’s only supported in Firefox and Safari at the moment:

So, it’s not exactly like words forming a circular shape, but we are placing text characters along the circle to form a clock face. Here’s some markup we can use to kick things off:

<div class="clock">
  <div class="clock-face">
    <time datetime="12:00">12</time>
    <time datetime="1:00">1</time>
    <time datetime="2:00">2</time>
    <time datetime="3:00">3</time>
    <time datetime="4:00">4</time>
    <time datetime="5:00">5</time>
    <time datetime="6:00">6</time>
    <time datetime="7:00">7</time>
    <time datetime="8:00">8</time>
    <time datetime="9:00">9</time>
    <time datetime="10:00">10</time>
    <time datetime="11:00">11</time>
  </div>
</div>

Next, here are some super basic styles for the .clock-face container. I decided to use the <time> tag with a datetime attribute. 

.clock {
  --_ow: clamp(5rem, 60vw, 40rem);
  --_w: 88cqi;
  aspect-ratio: 1;
  background-color: tomato;
  border-radius: 50%;
  container-type: inline;
  display: grid;
  height: var(--_ow);
  place-content: center;
  position: relative;
  width var(--_ow);
}

I decorated things a bit in there, but only to get the basic shape and background color to help us see what we’re doing. Notice how we save the width value in a CSS variable. We’ll use that later. Not much to look at so far:

Large tomato colored circle with a vertical list of numbers 1-12 on the left.

It looks like some sort of modern art experiment, right? Let’s introduce a new variable, --_r, to store the circle’s radius, which is equal to half of the circle’s width. This way, if the width (--_w) changes, the radius value (--_r) will also update — thanks to another CSS math function, calc():

.clock {
  --_w: 300px;
  --_r: calc(var(--_w) / 2);
  /* rest of styles */
}

Now, a bit of math. A circle is 360 degrees. We have 12 labels on our clock, so want to place the numbers every 30 degrees (360 / 12). In math-land, a circle begins at 3 o’clock, so noon is actually minus 90 degrees from that, which is 270 degrees (360 - 90).

Let’s add another variable, --_d, that we can use to set a degree value for each number on the clock face. We’re going to increment the values by 30 degrees to complete our circle:

.clock time:nth-child(1) { --_d: 270deg; }
.clock time:nth-child(2) { --_d: 300deg; }
.clock time:nth-child(3) { --_d: 330deg; }
.clock time:nth-child(4) { --_d: 0deg; }
.clock time:nth-child(5) { --_d: 30deg; }
.clock time:nth-child(6) { --_d: 60deg; }
.clock time:nth-child(7) { --_d: 90deg; }
.clock time:nth-child(8) { --_d: 120deg; }
.clock time:nth-child(9) { --_d: 150deg; }
.clock time:nth-child(10) { --_d: 180deg; }
.clock time:nth-child(11) { --_d: 210deg; }
.clock time:nth-child(12) { --_d: 240deg; }

OK, now’s the time to get our hands dirty with the sin() and cos() functions! What we want to do is use them to get the X and Y coordinates for each number so we can place them properly around the clock face.

The formula for the X coordinate is radius + (radius * cos(degree)). Let’s plug that into our new --_x variable:

--_x: calc(var(--_r) + (var(--_r) * cos(var(--_d))));

The formula for the Y coordinate is radius + (radius * sin(degree)). We have what we need to calculate that:

--_y: calc(var(--_r) + (var(--_r) * sin(var(--_d))));

There are a few housekeeping things we need to do to set up the numbers, so let’s put some basic styling on them to make sure they are absolutely positioned and placed with our coordinates:

.clock-face time {
  --_x: calc(var(--_r) + (var(--_r) * cos(var(--_d))));
  --_y: calc(var(--_r) + (var(--_r) * sin(var(--_d))));
  --_sz: 12cqi;
  display: grid;
  height: var(--_sz);
  left: var(--_x);
  place-content: center;
  position: absolute;
  top: var(--_y);
  width: var(--_sz);
}

Notice --_sz, which we’ll use for the width and height of the numbers in a moment. Let’s see what we have so far.

Large tomato colored circle with off-centered hour number labels along its edge.

This definitely looks more like a clock! See how the top-left corner of each number is positioned at the correct place around the circle? We need to “shrink” the radius when calculating the positions for each number. We can deduct the size of a number (--_sz) from the size of the circle (--_w), before we calculate the radius:

--_r: calc((var(--_w) - var(--_sz)) / 2);
Large tomato colored circle with hour number labels along its rounded edge.

Much better! Let’s change the colors, so it looks more elegant:

A white clock face with numbers against a dark gray background. The clock has no arms.

We could stop right here! We accomplished the goal of placing text around a circle, right? But what’s a clock without arms to show hours, minutes, and seconds?

Let’s use a single CSS animation for that. First, let’s add three more elements to our markup,

<div class="clock">
  <!-- after <time>-tags -->
  <span class="arm seconds"></span>
  <span class="arm minutes"></span>
  <span class="arm hours"></span>
  <span class="arm center"></span>
</div>

Then some common markup for all three arms. Again, most of this is just make sure the arms are absolutely positioned and placed accordingly:

.arm {
  background-color: var(--_abg);
  border-radius: calc(var(--_aw) * 2);
  display: block;
  height: var(--_ah);
  left: calc((var(--_w) - var(--_aw)) / 2);
  position: absolute;
  top: calc((var(--_w) / 2) - var(--_ah));
  transform: rotate(0deg);
  transform-origin: bottom;
  width: var(--_aw);
}

We’ll use the same animation for all three arms:

@keyframes turn {
  to {
    transform: rotate(1turn);
  }
}

The only difference is the time the individual arms take to make a full turn. For the hours arm, it takes 12 hours to make a full turn. The animation-duration property only accepts values in milliseconds and seconds. Let’s stick with seconds, which is 43,200 seconds (60 seconds * 60 minutes * 12 hours).

animation: turn 43200s infinite;

It takes 1 hour for the minutes arm to make a full turn. But we want this to be a multi-step animation so the movement between the arms is staggered rather than linear. We’ll need 60 steps, one for each minute:

animation: turn 3600s steps(60, end) infinite;

The seconds arm is almost the same as the minutes arm, but the duration is 60 seconds instead of 60 minutes:

animation: turn 60s steps(60, end) infinite;

Let’s update the properties we created in the common styles:

.seconds {
  --_abg: hsl(0, 5%, 40%);
  --_ah: 145px;
  --_aw: 2px;
  animation: turn 60s steps(60, end) infinite;
}
.minutes {
  --_abg: #333;
  --_ah: 145px;
  --_aw: 6px;
  animation: turn 3600s steps(60, end) infinite;
}
.hours {
  --_abg: #333;
  --_ah: 110px;
  --_aw: 6px;
  animation: turn 43200s linear infinite;
}

What if we want to start at the current time? We need a little bit of JavaScript:

const time = new Date();
const hour = -3600 * (time.getHours() % 12);
const mins = -60 * time.getMinutes();
app.style.setProperty('--_dm', `${mins}s`);
app.style.setProperty('--_dh', `${(hour+mins)}s`);

I’ve added id="app" to the clockface and set two new custom properties on it that set a negative animation-delay, as Mate Marschalko did when he shared a CSS-only clock. The getHours() method of JavaScipt’s Date object is using the 24-hour format, so we use the remainder operator to convert it into 12-hour format.

In the CSS, we need to add the animation-delay as well:

.minutes {
  animation-delay: var(--_dm, 0s);
  /* other styles */
}

.hours {
  animation-delay: var(--_dh, 0s);
  /* other styles */
}

Just one more thing. Using CSS @supports and the properties we’ve already created, we can provide a fallback to browsers that do not supprt sin() and cos(). (Thank you, Temani Afif!):

@supports not (left: calc(1px * cos(45deg))) {
  time {
    left: 50% !important;
    top: 50% !important;
    transform: translate(-50%,-50%) rotate(var(--_d)) translate(var(--_r)) rotate(calc(-1*var(--_d)))
  }
}

And, voilà! Our clock is done! Here’s the final demo one more time. Again, it’s only supported in Firefox and Safari at the moment.

What else can we do?

Just messing around here, but we can quickly turn our clock into a circular image gallery by replacing the <time> tags with <img> then updating the width (--_w) and radius (--_r) values:

Let’s try one more. I mentioned earlier how the clock looked kind of like a modern art experiment. We can lean into that and re-create a pattern I saw on a poster (that I unfortunately didn’t buy) in an art gallery the other day. As I recall, it was called “Moon” and consisted of a bunch of dots forming a circle.

A large circle formed out of a bunch of smaller filled circles of various earthtone colors.

We’ll use an unordered list this time since the circles don’t follow a particular order. We’re not even going to put all the list items in the markup. Instead, let’s inject them with JavaScript and add a few controls we can use to manipulate the final result.

The controls are range inputs (<input type="range">) which we’ll wrap in a <form> and listen for the input event.

<form id="controls">
  <fieldset>
    <label>Number of rings
      <input type="range" min="2" max="12" value="10" id="rings" />
    </label>
    <label>Dots per ring
      <input type="range" min="5" max="12" value="7" id="dots" />
    </label>
    <label>Spread
      <input type="range" min="10" max="40" value="40" id="spread" />
    </label>
  </fieldset>
</form>

We’ll run this method on “input”, which will create a bunch of <li> elements with the degree (--_d) variable we used earlier applied to each one. We can also repurpose our radius variable (--_r) .

I also want the dots to be different colors. So, let’s randomize (well, not completely randomized) the HSL color value for each list item and store it as a new CSS variable, --_bgc:

const update = () => {
  let s = "";
  for (let i = 1; i <= rings.valueAsNumber; i++) {
    const r = spread.valueAsNumber * i;
    const theta = coords(dots.valueAsNumber * i);
    for (let j = 0; j < theta.length; j++) {
      s += `<li style="--_d:${theta[j]};--_r:${r}px;--_bgc:hsl(${random(
        50,
        25
      )},${random(90, 50)}%,${random(90, 60)}%)"></li>`;
    }
  }
  app.innerHTML = s;
}

The random() method picks a value within a defined range of numbers:

const random = (max, min = 0, f = true) => f ? Math.floor(Math.random() * (max - min) + min) : Math.random() * max;

And that’s it. We use JavaScript to render the markup, but as soon as it’s rendered, we don’t really need it. The sin() and cos() functions help us position all the dots in the right spots.

Final thoughts

Placing things around a circle is a pretty basic example to demonstrate the powers of trigonometry functions like sin() and cos(). But it’s really cool that we are getting modern CSS features that provide new solutions for old workarounds I’m sure we’ll see way more interesting, complex, and creative use cases, especially as browser support comes to Chrome and Edge.


Creating a Clock with the New CSS sin() and cos() Trigonometry Functions originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the DigitalOcean family. You should get the newsletter.

Don’t Fight the Cascade, Control It!

If you’re disciplined and make use of the inheritance that the CSS cascade provides, you’ll end up writing less CSS. But because our styles often comes from all kinds of sources — and can be a pain to structure and maintain—the cascade can be a source of frustration, and the reason we end up with more CSS than necessary.

Some years ago, Harry Roberts came up with ITCSS and it’s a clever way of structuring CSS.

Mixed with BEM, ITCSS has become a popular way that people write and organize CSS.

However, even with ITCSS and BEM, there are still times where we still struggle with the cascade. For example, I’m sure you’ve had to @import external CSS components at a specific location to prevent breaking things, or reach for the dreaded !important at some point in time.

Recently, some new tools were added to our CSS toolbox, and they allow us to finally control the cascade. Let’s look at them.

O cascade, :where art thou?

Using the :where pseudo-selector allows us to remove specificity to “just after the user-agent default styles,” no matter where or when the CSS is loaded into the document. That means the specificity of the whole thing is literally zero — totally wiped out. This is handy for generic components, which we’ll look into in a moment.

First, imagine some generic <table> styles, using :where:

:where(table) {
  background-color: tan;
}

Now, if you add some other table styles before the :where selector, like this:

table {
  background-color: hotpink;
}

:where(table) {
  background-color: tan;
}

…the table background becomes hotpink, even though the table selector is specified before the :where selector in the cascade. That’s the beauty of :where, and why it’s already being used for CSS resets.

:where has a sibling, which has almost the exact opposite effect: the :is selector.

The specificity of the :is() pseudo-class is replaced by the specificity of its most specific argument. Thus, a selector written with :is() does not necessarily have equivalent specificity to the equivalent selector written without :is(). Selectors Level 4 specification

Expanding on our previous example:

:is(table) {
  --tbl-bgc: orange;
}
table {
  --tbl-bgc: tan;
}
:where(table) {
  --tbl-bgc: hotpink;
  background-color: var(--tbl-bgc);
}

The <table class="c-tbl"> background color will be tan because the specificity of :is is less specific than table.

However, if we were to change it to this:

:is(table, .c-tbl) {
  --tbl-bgc: orange;
}

…the background color will be orange, since :is has the weight of it’s heaviest selector, which is .c-tbl.

Example: A configurable table component

Now, let’s see how we can use :where in our components. We’ll be building a table component, starting with the HTML:

Let’s wrap .c-tbl in a :where-selector and, just for fun, add rounded corners to the table. That means we need border-collapse: separate, as we can’t use border-radius on table cells when the table is using border-collapse: collapse:

:where(.c-tbl) {
  border-collapse: separate;
  border-spacing: 0;
  table-layout: auto;
  width: 99.9%;
}

The cells use different styling for the <thead> and <tbody>-cells:

:where(.c-tbl thead th) {
  background-color: hsl(200, 60%, 40%);
  border-style: solid;
  border-block-start-width: 0;
  border-inline-end-width: 1px;
  border-block-end-width: 0;
  border-inline-start-width: 0;
  color: hsl(200, 60%, 99%);
  padding-block: 1.25ch;
  padding-inline: 2ch;
  text-transform: uppercase;
}
:where(.c-tbl tbody td) {
  background-color: #FFF;
  border-color: hsl(200, 60%, 80%);
  border-style: solid;
  border-block-start-width: 0;
  border-inline-end-width: 1px;
  border-block-end-width: 1px;
  border-inline-start-width: 0;
  padding-block: 1.25ch;
  padding-inline: 2ch;
}

And, because of our rounded corners and the missing border-collapse: collapse, we need to add some extra styles, specifically for the table borders and a hover state on the cells:

:where(.c-tbl tr td:first-of-type) {
  border-inline-start-width: 1px;
}
:where(.c-tbl tr th:last-of-type) {
  border-inline-color: hsl(200, 60%, 40%);
}
:where(.c-tbl tr th:first-of-type) {
  border-inline-start-color: hsl(200, 60%, 40%);
}
:where(.c-tbl thead th:first-of-type) {
  border-start-start-radius: 0.5rem;
}
:where(.c-tbl thead th:last-of-type) {
  border-start-end-radius: 0.5rem;
}
:where(.c-tbl tbody tr:last-of-type td:first-of-type) {
  border-end-start-radius: 0.5rem;
}
:where(.c-tbl tr:last-of-type td:last-of-type) {
  border-end-end-radius: 0.5rem;
}
/* hover */
@media (hover: hover) {
  :where(.c-tbl) tr:hover td {
    background-color: hsl(200, 60%, 95%);
  }
}

Now we can create variations of our table component by injecting other styles before or after our generic styles (courtesy of the specificity-stripping powers of :where), either by overwriting the .c-tbl element or by adding a BEM-style modifier-class (e.g. c-tbl--purple):

<table class="c-tbl c-tbl--purple">
.c-tbl--purple th {
  background-color: hsl(330, 50%, 40%)
}
.c-tbl--purple td {
  border-color: hsl(330, 40%, 80%);
}
.c-tbl--purple tr th:last-of-type {
  border-inline-color: hsl(330, 50%, 40%);
}
.c-tbl--purple tr th:first-of-type {
  border-inline-start-color: hsl(330, 50%, 40%);
}

Cool! But notice how we keep repeating colors? And what if we want to change the border-radius or the border-width? That would end up with a lot of repeated CSS.

Let’s move all of these to CSS custom properties and, while we’re at it, we can move all configurable properties to the top of the component’s “scope“ — which is the table element itself — so we can easily play around with them later.

CSS Custom Properties

I’m going to switch things up in the HTML and use a data-component attribute on the table element that can be targeted for styling.

<table data-component="table" id="table">

That data-component will hold the generic styles that we can use on any instance of the component, i.e. the styles the table needs no matter what color variation we apply. The styles for a specific table component instance will be contained in a regular class, using custom properties from the generic component.

[data-component="table"] {
  /* Styles needed for all table variations */
}
.c-tbl--purple {
  /* Styles for the purple variation */
}

If we place all the generic styles in a data-attribute, we can use whatever naming convention we want. This way, we don’t have to worry if your boss insists on naming the table’s classes something like .BIGCORP__TABLE, .table-component or something else.

In the generic component, each CSS property points to a custom property. Properties, that have to work on child-elements, like border-color, are specified at the root of the generic component:

:where([data-component="table"]) {
  /* These will will be used multiple times, and in other selectors */
  --tbl-hue: 200;
  --tbl-sat: 50%;
  --tbl-bdc: hsl(var(--tbl-hue), var(--tbl-sat), 80%);
}

/* Here, it's used on a child-node: */
:where([data-component="table"] td) {
  border-color: var(--tbl-bdc);
}

For other properties, decide whether it should have a static value, or be configurable with its own custom property. If you’re using custom properties, remember to define a default value that the table can fall back to in the event that a variation class is missing.

:where([data-component="table"]) {
  /* These are optional, with fallbacks */
  background-color: var(--tbl-bgc, transparent);
  border-collapse: var(--tbl-bdcl, separate);
}

If you’re wondering how I’m naming the custom properties, I’m using a component-prefix (e.g. --tbl) followed by an Emmett-abbreviation (e.g. -bgc). In this case, --tbl is the component-prefix, -bgc is the background color, and -bdcl is the border collapse. So, for example, --tbl-bgc is the table component’s background color. I only use this naming convention when working with component properties, as opposed to global properties which I tend to keep more general.

Now, if we open up DevTools, we can play around with the custom properties. For example, We can change --tbl-hue to a different hue value in the HSL color, set --tbl-bdrs: 0 to remove border-radius, and so on.

A :where CSS rule set showing the custom properties of the table showing how the cascade’s specificity scan be used in context.

When working with your own components, this is the point in time you’ll discover which parameters (i.e. the custom property values) the component needs to make things look just right.

We can also use custom properties to control column alignment and width:

:where[data-component="table"] tr > *:nth-of-type(1)) {
  text-align: var(--ca1, initial);
  width: var(--cw1, initial);
  /* repeat for column 2 and 3, or use a SCSS-loop ... */
}

In DevTools, select the table and add these to the element.styles selector:

element.style {
  --ca2: center; /* Align second column center */
  --ca3: right; /* Align third column right */
}

Now, let’s create our specific component styles, using a regular class, .c-tbl (which stands for “component-table” in BEM parlance). Let’s toss that class in the table markup.

<table class="c-tbl" data-component="table" id="table">

Now, let’s change the --tbl-hue value in the CSS just to see how this works before we start messing around with all of the property values:

.c-tbl {
  --tbl-hue: 330;
}

Notice, that we only need to update properties rather than writing entirely new CSS! Changing one little property updates the table’s color — no new classes or overriding properties lower in the cascade.

Notice how the border colors change as well. That’s because all the colors in the table inherit from the --tbl-hue variable

We can write a more complex selector, but still update a single property, to get something like zebra-striping:

.c-tbl tr:nth-child(even) td {
  --tbl-td-bgc: hsl(var(--tbl-hue), var(--tbl-sat), 95%);
}

And remember: It doesn’t matter where you load the class. Because our generic styles are using :where, the specificity is wiped out, and any custom styles for a specific variation will be applied no matter where they are used. That’s the beauty of using :where to take control of the cascade!

And best of all, we can create all kinds of table components from the generic styles with a few lines of CSS.

Purple table with zebra-striped columns
Light table with a “noinlineborder” parameter… which we’ll cover next

Adding parameters with another data-attribute

So far, so good! The generic table component is very simple. But what if it requires something more akin to real parameters? Perhaps for things like:

  • zebra-striped rows and columns
  • a sticky header and sticky column
  • hover-state options, such as hover row, hover cell, hover column

We could simply add BEM-style modifier classes, but we can actually accomplish it more efficiently by adding another data-attribute to the mix. Perhaps a data-param that holds the parameters like this:

<table data-component="table" data-param="zebrarow stickyrow">

Then, in our CSS, we can use an attribute-selector to match a whole word in a list of parameters. For example, zebra-striped rows:

[data-component="table"][data-param~="zebrarow"] tr:nth-child(even) td {
  --tbl-td-bgc: var(--tbl-zebra-bgc);
}

Or zebra-striping columns:

[data-component="table"][data-param~="zebracol"] td:nth-of-type(odd) {
  --tbl-td-bgc: var(--tbl-zebra-bgc);
}

Let’s go nuts and make both the table header and the first column sticky:


[data-component="table"][data-param~="stickycol"] thead tr th:first-child,[data-component="table"][data-param~="stickycol"] tbody tr td:first-child {
  --tbl-td-bgc: var(--tbl-zebra-bgc);
  inset-inline-start: 0;
  position: sticky;
}
[data-component="table"][data-param~="stickyrow"] thead th {
  inset-block-start: -1px;
  position: sticky;
}

Here’s a demo that allows you to change one parameter at a time:

The default light theme in the demo is this:

.c-tbl--light {
  --tbl-bdrs: 0;
  --tbl-sat: 15%;
  --tbl-th-bgc: #eee;
  --tbl-th-bdc: #eee;
  --tbl-th-c: #555;
  --tbl-th-tt: normal;
}

…where data-param is set to noinlineborder which corresponds to these styles:

[data-param~="noinlineborder"] thead tr > th {
  border-block-start-width: 0;
  border-inline-end-width: 0;
  border-block-end-width: var(--tbl-bdw);
  border-inline-start-width: 0;
}

I know my data-attribute way of styling and configuring generic components is very opinionated. That’s just how I roll, so please feel free to stick with whatever method you’re most comfortable working with, whether it’s a BEM modifier class or something else.

The bottom line is this: embrace :where and :is and the cascade-controlling powers they provide. And, if possible, construct the CSS in such a way that you wind up writing as little new CSS as possible when creating new component variations!

Cascade Layers

The last cascade-busting tool I want to look at is “Cascade Layers.” At the time of this writing, it’s an experimental feature defined in the CSS Cascading and Inheritance Level 5 specification that you can access in Safari or Chrome by enabling the #enable-cascade-layers flag.

Bramus Van Damme sums up the concept nicely:

The true power of Cascade Layers comes from its unique position in the Cascade: before Selector Specificity and Order Of Appearance. Because of that we don’t need to worry about the Selector Specificity of the CSS that is used in other Layers, nor about the order in which we load CSS into these Layers — something that will come in very handy for larger teams or when loading in third-party CSS.

Perhaps even nicer is his illustration showing where Cascade Layers fall in the cascade:

Credit: Bramus Van Damme

At the beginning of this article, I mentioned ITCSS — a way of taming the cascade by specifying the load-order of generic styles, components etc. Cascade Layers allow us to inject a stylesheet at a given location. So a simplified version of this structure in Cascade Layers looks like this:

@layer generic, components;

With this single line, we’ve decided the order of our layers. First come the generic styles, followed by the component-specific ones.

Let’s pretend that we’re loading our generic styles somewhere much later than our component styles:

@layer components {
  body {
    background-color: lightseagreen;
  }
}

/* MUCH, much later... */

@layer generic { 
  body {
    background-color: tomato;
  }
}

The background-color will be lightseagreen because our component styles layer is set after the generic styles layer. So, the styles in the components layer “win” even if they are written before the generic layer styles.

Again, just another tool for controlling how the CSS cascade applies styles, allowing us more flexibility to organize things logically rather than wrestling with specificity.

Now you’re in control!

The whole point here is that the CSS cascade is becoming a lot easier to wrangle, thanks to new features. We saw how the :where and :is pseudo-selectors allows us to control specificity, either by stripping out the specificity of an entire ruleset or taking on the specificity of the most specific argument, respectively. Then we used CSS Custom Properties to override styles without writing a new class to override another. From there, we took a slight detour down data-attribute lane to help us add more flexibility to create component variations merely by adding arguments to the HTML. And, finally, we poked at Cascade Layers which should prove handy for specifying the loading order or styles using @layer.

If you leave with only one takeaway from this article, I hope it’s that the CSS cascade is no longer the enemy it’s often made to be. We are gaining the tools to stop fighting it and start leaning into even more.


Header photo by Stephen Leonardi on Unsplash


Don’t Fight the Cascade, Control It! originally published on CSS-Tricks. You should get the newsletter and become a supporter.

How to Play and Pause CSS Animations with CSS Custom Properties

Let’s have a look CSS @keyframes animations, and specifically about how you can pause and otherwise control them. There is a CSS property specifically for it, that can be controlled with JavaScript, but there is plenty of nuance to get into in the details. We’ll also look at my preferred way of setting this up which gives lots of control. Hint: it involves CSS custom properties.

The importance of pausing animations

Recently, while working on the CSS-powered slideshow you’ll see later in this article, I was inspecting the animations in the Layers panel of DevTools. I noticed something interesting I’d never thought about before: animations not currently in the viewport were still running!

Maybe it’s not that unexpected. We know videos do that. Videos just go on until you pause them. But it made me wonder if these playing animations still use the CPU/GPU? Do they consume unnecessary processing power, slowing down other parts of the page?

Inspecting frames in the Performance panel in DevTools didn’t shed any more light on this since I couldn’t see “offscreen”-frames. But, when I scrolled away from my “CSS Only Slideshow” at the first slide, then waited and scrolled back, it was at slide five. The animation hadn’t paused. Animations just run and run, until you pause them.

So I began to look into how, why and when animations should pause. Performance is an obvious reason, given the findings above. Another reason is control. Users not only love to have control, but they should have control. A couple of years ago, my wife had a really bad concussion. Since then, she has avoided webpages with too many animations, as they make her dizzy. As a result, I consider accessibility perhaps the most important reason for allowing animations to pause.

All together, this is important stuff. We’re talking specifically about CSS keyframe animations, but broadly, that means we’re talking about:

  1. Performance
  2. Control
  3. Accessibility

The basics of pausing an animation

The only way to truly pause an animation in CSS is to use the animation-play-state property with a paused value.

.paused {
  animation-play-state: paused;
}

In JavaScript, the property is “camelCased” as animationPlayState and set like this:

element.style.animationPlayState = 'paused';

We can create a toggle that plays and pauses the animation by reading the current value of animationPlayState:

const running = element.style.animationPlayState === 'running';

…and then setting it to the opposite value:

element.style.animationPlayState = running ? 'paused' : 'running';

Setting the duration

Another way to pause animations is to set animation-duration to 0s. The animation is actually running, but since it has no duration, you won’t see any action.

But if we change the value to 3s instead:

It works, but has a major caveat: the animations are technically still running. The animation is merely toggling between its initial position, and where it is next in the sequence.

Straight up removing the animation

We can remove the animation entirely and add it back via classes, but like animation-duration, this doesn’t actually pause the animation.

.remove-animation {
  animation: none !important;
}

Since true pausing is really what we’re after here, let’s stick with animation-play-state and look into other ways of using it.

Using data attributes and CSS custom properties

Let’s use a data-attribute as a selector in our CSS. We can call those whatever we want, so I’m going to use a [data-animation]-attribute on all the elements where I’d like to play/pause animations. That way, it can be distinguished from other animations:

<div data-animation></div>

That attribute is the selector, and the animation shorthand is the property where we’re setting everything. We’ll toss in a bunch of CSS custom properties *(*using Emmet-abbreviations) as values:

[data-animation] {
  animation:
    var(--animn, none)
    var(--animdur, 1s)
    var(--animtf, linear)
    var(--animdel, 0s)
    var(--animic, infinite)
    var(--animdir, alternate)
    var(--animfm, none)
    var(--animps, running);
}

With that in place, any animation with this data-attribute will be perfectly ready to accept animations, and we can control individual aspects of the animation with custom properties. Some animations are going to have something in common (like duration, easing-type, etc.), so fallback values are set on the custom properties as well.

Why CSS custom properties? First of all, they can be read and set in both CSS and JavaScript. Secondly, they help significantly reduce the amount of CSS we need to write. And, since we can set them within @keyframes (at least in Chrome at the time of writing), they offer new and exiting ways to work with animations!

For the animations themselves, I’m using class selectors and updating the variables from the [data-animation]-selector:

<div class="circle a-slide" data-animation></div>

Why a class and a data-attribute? At this stage, the data-animation attribute might as well be a regular class, but we’re going to use it in more advanced ways later. Note that the .circle class name actually has nothing to do with the animation — it’s just a class for styling the element.

/* Animation classes */
.a-pulse {
  --animn: pulse;
}
.a-slide {
  --animdur: 3s;
  --animn: slide;
}

/* Keyframes */
@keyframes pulse {
  0% { transform: scale(1); }
  25% { transform: scale(.9); }
  50% { transform: scale(1); }
  75% { transform: scale(1.1); }
  100% { transform: scale(1); }
}
@keyframes slide {
  from { margin-left: 0%; }
  to { margin-left: 150px; }
}

We only need to update the values that will change, so if we use some common values in the fallback values for the data-animation selector, we only need to update the name of the animation’s custom property, --animn.

Example: Pausing with the checkbox hack

To pause all the animations using the ol’ checkbox hack, let’s create a checkbox before the animations:

<input type="checkbox" data-animation-pause />

And update the --animps property when checked:

[data-animation-pause]:checked ~ [data-animation] {
  --animps: paused;
}

That’s it! The animations toggle between played and paused when clicking the checkbox — no JavaScript required.

CSS-only slideshow

Let’s put some of these ideas to work!

I‘ve played with the <details>-tag a lot recently. It’s the obvious candidate for accordions, but it can also be used for tooltips, toggle-tips, drop-downs (styled <select>-look-a-likes), mega-menus… you name it. It is the official HTML disclosure element, after all. Apart from the global attributes and global events that all HTML elements accept, <details> has a single open attribute, and a single toggle event. So, like the checkbox hack, it’s perfect for toggling state — but even simpler:

details[open] {
  --state: 1;
}
details:not([open]) {
  --state: 0;
}

I decided to do a slideshow, where the slides change automatically via a primary animation called autoplay, and each individual slide has its own unique secondary animation. The animation-play-state is controlled by the --animps-property. Each individual slide can have it’s own, unique animation, defined in a --animn-property:

<figure style="--animn:kenburns-top;--index:0;">
  <img src="some-slide-image.jpg" />
  <figcaption>Caption</figcaption>
</figure>

The animation-play-state of the secondary animations are controlled by the --img-animps-property. I found a bunch of nice Ken Burns-esque animations at Animista and switched between them in the --animn-properties of the slides.

Pausing an animation from another animation

In order to prevent GPU overload, it would be ideal for the primary animation to pause any secondary animations. We noted it briefly earlier, but only Chrome (at the time of writing, and it is a bit shaky) can update a CSS Custom Property from an @keyframe animation — which you can see in the following example where the --bgc-property and --counter-properties are modified at different frames:

The initial state of the secondary animation, the --img-animps -property, needs to be paused, even if the primary animation is running:

details[open] ~ .c-mm__inner .c-mm__frame {
  --animps: running;
  --img-animps: paused;
}

Then, in the main animation @keyframes, the property is updated to running:

@keyframes autoplay {
  0.1% {
    --img-animps: running; /* START */
    opacity: 0;
    z-index: calc(var(--z) + var(--slides))
  }
  5% { opacity: 1 }
  50% { opacity: 1 }
  51% { --img-animps: paused } /* STOP! */
  100% {
    opacity: 0;
    z-index: var(--z)
  }
}

To make this work in browsers other than Chrome, the initial value needs to be running, as they cannot update a CSS custom property from a @keyframe.

Here’s the slideshow, with a “details hack” play/pause-button — no JavaScript required:

Enabling prefers-reduced-motion

Some people prefer no animations, or at least reduced motion. It might just be a personal preference, but can also be because of a medical condition. We talked about the importance of accessibility with animations at the very top of this post.

Both macOS and Windows have options that allow users to inform browsers that they prefer reduced motion on websites. This enables us to reach for the prefers-reduced-motion feature query, which Eric Bailey has written all about.

@media (prefers-reduced-motion) { ... }

Let’s use the [data-animation]-selector for reduced motion by giving it different values that are applied when prefers-reduced-motion is enabled*:*

  • alternate = run a different animation
  • once = set the animation-iteration-count to 1
  • slow = change the animation-duration-property
  • stop = set animation-play-state to paused

These are just suggestions and they can be anything you want, really.

<div class="circle a-slide" data-animation="alternate"></div>
<div class="circle a-slide" data-animation="once"></div>
<div class="circle a-slide" data-animation="slow"></div>
<div class="circle a-slide" data-animation="stop"></div>

And the updated media query:

@media (prefers-reduced-motion) {
  [data-animation="alternate"] {
   /* Change animation duration AND name */
    --animdur: 4s;
    --animn: opacity;
  }
  [data-animation="slow"] {
    /* Change animation duration */
    --animdur: 10s;
  }
  [data-animation="stop"] {
    /* Stop the animation */
    --animps: paused;
  }
}

If this is too generic, and you prefer having unique, alternate animations per animation class, group the selectors like this:

.a-slide[data-animation="alternate"] { /* etc. */ }

Here’s a Pen with a checkbox simulating prefers-reduced-motion. Scroll down within the Pen to see the behavior change for each circle:

Pausing with JavaScript

To re-create the “Pause all animations”-checkbox in JavaScript, iterate all the [data-animation]-elements and toggle the same --animps custom property:

<button id="js-toggle" type="button">Toggle Animations</button>
const animations = document.querySelectorAll('[data-animation');
const jstoggle = document.getElementById('js-toggle');

jstoggle.addEventListener('click', () => {
  animations.forEach(animation => {
    const running = getComputedStyle(animation).getPropertyValue("--animps") || 'running';
    animation.style.setProperty('--animps', running === 'running' ? 'paused' : 'running');
  })
});

It’s exactly the same concept as the checkbox hack, using the same custom property: --animps, only set by JavaScript instead of CSS. If we want to support older browsers, we can toggle a class, that will update the animation-play-state.

Using IntersectionObserver

To play and pause all [data-animation]-animations automatically — and thus not unnecessarily overloading the GPU — we can use an IntersectionObserver.

First, we need to make sure that no animations are running at all:

[data-animation] {
  /* Change 'running' to 'paused' */
  animation: var(--animps, paused); 
}

Then, we’ll create the observer and trigger it when an element is 25% or 75% in viewport. If the latter is matched, the animation starts playing; otherwise it pauses.

By default, all elements with a [data-animation]-attribute will be observed, but if prefers-reduced-motion is enabled (set to “reduce”), the elements with [data-animation="stop"] will be ignored.

const IO = new IntersectionObserver((entries) => {
  entries.forEach((entry) => {
    if (entry.isIntersecting) {
      const state = (entry.intersectionRatio >= 0.75) ? 'running' : 'paused';
      entry.target.style.setProperty('--animps', state);
    }
  });
}, {
  threshold: [0.25, 0.75]
});

const mediaQuery = window.matchMedia("(prefers-reduced-motion: reduce)");
const elements = mediaQuery?.matches ? document.querySelectorAll(`[data-animation]:not([data-animation="stop"]`) : document.querySelectorAll('[data-animation]');

elements.forEach(animation => {
  IO.observe(animation);
});

You have to play around with the threshold-values, and/or whether you need to unobserve some animations after they’ve triggered, etc. If you load new content or animations dynamically, you might need to re-write parts of the observer as well. It’s impossible to cover all scenarios, but using this as a foundation should get you started with auto-playing and pausing CSS animations!

Bonus: Adding <audio> to the slideshow with minimal JavaScript

Here’s an idea to add music to the slideshow we built. First, add an audio-tag:

<audio src="/asset/audio/slideshow.mp3" hidden loop></audio>

Then, in Javascript:

const audio = document.querySelector('your-audio-selector');
const details = document.querySelector('your-details-selector');
details.addEventListener('toggle', () => {
  details.open ? audio.play() : audio.pause();
})

Pretty simple, huh?

I did a “Silent Movie” (with audio)-demo here, where you get to know my geeky past. 🙂


The post How to Play and Pause CSS Animations with CSS Custom Properties appeared first on CSS-Tricks.

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