Animation¶
This chapter discusses how to use Textual's animation system to create visual effects such as movement, blending, and fading.
Animating styles¶
Textual's animator can change an attribute from one value to another in fixed increments over a period of time. You can apply animations to styles such as offset
to move widgets around the screen, and opacity
to create fading effects.
Apps and widgets both have an animate method which will animate properties on those objects. Additionally, styles
objects have an identical animate
method which will animate styles.
Let's look at an example of how we can animate the opacity of a widget to make it fade out.
The following example app contains a single Static
widget which is immediately animated to an opacity of 0.0
(making it invisible) over a duration of two seconds.
from textual.app import App, ComposeResult
from textual.widgets import Static
class AnimationApp(App):
def compose(self) -> ComposeResult:
self.box = Static("Hello, World!")
self.box.styles.background = "red"
self.box.styles.color = "black"
self.box.styles.padding = (1, 2)
yield self.box
def on_mount(self):
self.box.styles.animate("opacity", value=0.0, duration=2.0)
if __name__ == "__main__":
app = AnimationApp()
app.run()
The animator updates the value of the opacity
attribute on the styles
object in small increments over two seconds. Here's how the widget will change as time progresses:
Duration and Speed¶
When requesting an animation you can specify a duration or speed. The duration is how long the animation should take in seconds. The speed is how many units a value should change in one second. For instance, if you animate a value at 0 to 10 with a speed of 2, it will complete in 5 seconds.
Easing functions¶
The easing function determines the journey a value takes on its way to the target value. It could move at a constant pace, or it might start off slow then accelerate towards its final value. Textual supports a number of easing functions.
Run the following from the command prompt to preview them.
You can specify which easing method to use via the easing
parameter on the animate
method. The default easing method is "in_out_cubic"
which accelerates and then decelerates to produce a pleasing organic motion.
Note
The textual easing
preview requires the textual-dev
package to be installed (using pip install textual-dev
).
Completion callbacks¶
You can pass a callable to the animator via the on_complete
parameter. Textual will run the callable when the animation has completed.
Delaying animations¶
You can delay the start of an animation with the delay
parameter of the animate
method.
This parameter accepts a float
value representing the number of seconds to delay the animation by.
For example, self.box.styles.animate("opacity", value=0.0, duration=2.0, delay=5.0)
delays the start of the animation by five seconds,
meaning the animation will start after 5 seconds and complete 2 seconds after that.