bezier-easing

WebJar for bezier-easing

License

License

MIT
GroupId

GroupId

org.webjars.npm
ArtifactId

ArtifactId

bezier-easing
Last Version

Last Version

2.1.0
Release Date

Release Date

Type

Type

jar
Description

Description

bezier-easing
WebJar for bezier-easing
Project URL

Project URL

https://www.webjars.org
Source Code Management

Source Code Management

https://github.com/gre/bezier-easing

Download bezier-easing

How to add to project

<!-- https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/org.webjars.npm/bezier-easing/ -->
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.webjars.npm</groupId>
    <artifactId>bezier-easing</artifactId>
    <version>2.1.0</version>
</dependency>
// https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/org.webjars.npm/bezier-easing/
implementation 'org.webjars.npm:bezier-easing:2.1.0'
// https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/org.webjars.npm/bezier-easing/
implementation ("org.webjars.npm:bezier-easing:2.1.0")
'org.webjars.npm:bezier-easing:jar:2.1.0'
<dependency org="org.webjars.npm" name="bezier-easing" rev="2.1.0">
  <artifact name="bezier-easing" type="jar" />
</dependency>
@Grapes(
@Grab(group='org.webjars.npm', module='bezier-easing', version='2.1.0')
)
libraryDependencies += "org.webjars.npm" % "bezier-easing" % "2.1.0"
[org.webjars.npm/bezier-easing "2.1.0"]

Dependencies

There are no dependencies for this project. It is a standalone project that does not depend on any other jars.

Project Modules

There are no modules declared in this project.

bezier-easing Build Status

BezierEasing provides Cubic Bezier Curve easing which generalizes easing functions (ease-in, ease-out, ease-in-out, ...any other custom curve) exactly like in CSS Transitions.

Implementing efficient lookup is not easy because it implies projecting the X coordinate to a Bezier Curve. This micro library uses fast heuristics (involving dichotomic search, newton-raphson, sampling) to focus on performance and precision.

It is heavily based on implementations available in Firefox and Chrome (for the CSS transition-timing-function property).

Usage

var easing = BezierEasing(0, 0, 1, 0.5);
// easing allows to project x in [0.0,1.0] range onto the bezier-curve defined by the 4 points (see schema below).
console.log(easing(0.0)); // 0.0
console.log(easing(0.5)); // 0.3125
console.log(easing(1.0)); // 1.0

(this schema is from the CSS spec)

TimingFunction.png

BezierEasing(P1.x, P1.y, P2.x, P2.y)

Install

npm install bezier-easing

It is the equivalent to CSS Transitions' transition-timing-function.

In the same way you can define in CSS cubic-bezier(0.42, 0, 0.58, 1), with BezierEasing, you can define it using BezierEasing(0.42, 0, 0.58, 1) which have the `` function taking an X and computing the Y interpolated easing value (see schema).

License

MIT License.

Tests

Build Status

npm test

See also

Who use it?

More informations

Implementation based on this article.

Contributing

You need a node installed.

Install the deps:

npm install

The library is in index.js.

Ensure any modication will:

  • keep validating the tests (run npm test)
  • not bring performance regression (compare with npm run benchmark – don't rely 100% on its precision but it still helps to notice big gaps)
  • Run the visual example: npm run visual

Versions

Version
2.1.0
2.0.3
1.1.1