Gatts Posted June 29, 2022 Share Posted June 29, 2022 (I am not sure if this is the right way of attaching a video here) What i've tried to do is separate each <text> into <tspan> 's letter. Each of that letter would have the same classname. I have encountered a problem where translate properties are not working on the tspan but other animation properties are working like opacity. Based on my research, it is also not possible to use translate properties on <tspan> elements. So, how would you guys suggest I do this effect? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GSAP Helper Posted June 29, 2022 Share Posted June 29, 2022 It's pretty tough to troubleshoot without a minimal demo. Would you please provide a very simple CodePen or CodeSandbox that demonstrates the issue? Please don't include your whole project. Just some colored elements and the GSAP code is best (avoid frameworks if possible). See if you can recreate the issue with as few dependancies as possible. If not, incrementally add code bit by bit until it breaks. Usually people solve their own issues during this process! If not, then at least we have a reduced test case which greatly increases your chances of getting a relevant answer. Here's a starter CodePen that loads all the plugins. Just click "fork" at the bottom right and make your minimal demo: See the Pen aYYOdN by GreenSock (@GreenSock) on CodePen If you're using something like React/Next/Nuxt/Gatsby or some other framework, you may find CodeSandbox easier to use. Once we see an isolated demo with your attempt, we'll do our best to jump in and help with your GSAP-specific questions. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Carl Posted June 29, 2022 Share Posted June 29, 2022 Yes, your research is correct. tspans don't accept css transform values. However they do have x, y, dx, dy, and rotate attributes that can be animated, but they bring along their own baggage. By baggage, I mean they are a nightmare to work with. Consider the following example See the Pen WNzNLwz?editors=1010 by snorkltv (@snorkltv) on CodePen Note how: moving the "e" moves all the letters that follow. the "o" rotates around the lower left corner. if you remove y="100" on the "e" <tspan> then the animation starts at y:0 which is above the viewport. if you uncomment the seemingly simple stagger on the last line then the animation gets totally mangled I'm currently working on a lesson video explaining all that (and more), but for the best results you need to: Break your text apart into individual <path> outlines (my preference) OR create individual <text> elements for each character and manually position them where they should be. This is acceptable for a few words but if you have many lines of text you may want to just animate each line instead of each character. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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