animation-composition

Baseline 2023

Newly available

Since July 2023, this feature works across the latest devices and browser versions. This feature might not work in older devices or browsers.

The animation-composition CSS property specifies the composite operation to use when multiple animations affect the same property simultaneously.

Syntax

css
/* Single animation */
animation-composition: replace;
animation-composition: add;
animation-composition: accumulate;

/* Multiple animations */
animation-composition: replace, add;
animation-composition: add, accumulate;
animation-composition: replace, add, accumulate;

/* Global values */
animation-composition: inherit;
animation-composition: initial;
animation-composition: revert;
animation-composition: revert-layer;
animation-composition: unset;

Note: When you specify multiple comma-separated values on an animation-* property, they will be applied to the animations in the order in which the animation-names appear. If the number of animations and compositions differ, the values listed in the animation-composition property will cycle from the first to the last animation-name, looping until all the animations have an assigned animation-composition value. For more information, see Setting multiple animation property values.

Values

replace

The effect value overrides the underlying value of the property. This is the default value.

add

The effect value builds on the underlying value of the property. This operation produces an additive effect. For animation types where the addition operation is not commutative, the order of the operands is the underlying value followed by the effect value.

accumulate

The effect and underlying values are combined. For animation types where the addition operation is not commutative, the order of the operands is the underlying value followed by the effect value.

Description

Each property that is targeted by the @keyframes at-rule is associated with an effect stack. The value of the effect stack is calculated by combining the underlying value of a property in a CSS style rule with the effect value of that property in the keyframe. The animation-composition property helps to specify how to combine the underlying value with the effect value.

For example, in the CSS below, blur(5px) is the underlying value, and blur(10px) is the effect value. The animation-composition property specifies the operation to perform to produce the final effect value after compositing the effect of the underlying value and the effect value.

css
.icon:hover {
  filter: blur(5px);
  animation: 3s infinite pulse;
  animation-composition: add;
}

@keyframes pulse {
  0% {
    filter: blur(10px);
  }
  100% {
    filter: blur(20px);
  }
}

Consider different values for the animation-composition property in the above example. The final effect value in each of those cases will be calculated as explained below:

  • With replace, blur(10px) will replace blur(5px) in the 0% keyframe. This is the default behavior of the property.
  • With add, the composite effect value in the 0% keyframe will be blur(5px) blur(10px).
  • With accumulate, the composite effect value in 0% keyframe will be blur(15px).

Note: A composite operation can also be specified in a keyframe. In that case, the specified composite operation is used for each property first within that keyframe and then on each property in the next keyframe.

Formal definition

Initial valuereplace
Applies toall elements
Inheritedno
Computed valueas specified
Animation typeNot animatable

Formal syntax

animation-composition = 
<single-animation-composition>#

<single-animation-composition> =
replace |
add |
accumulate

Examples

Understanding the animation-composition values

The example below shows the effect of different animation-composition values side-by-side.

HTML

html
<div class="container">
  replace
  <div id="replace" class="target"></div>
</div>
<div class="container">
  add
  <div id="add" class="target"></div>
</div>
<div class="container">
  accumulate
  <div id="accumulate" class="target"></div>
</div>

CSS

Here the underlying value is translateX(50px) rotate(45deg).

css
@keyframes slide {
  20%,
  40% {
    transform: translateX(100px);
    background: yellow;
  }
  80%,
  100% {
    transform: translateX(150px);
    background: orange;
  }
}

.target {
  transform: translateX(30px) rotate(45deg);
  animation: slide 5s linear infinite;
}
.target:hover {
  animation-play-state: paused;
}
#replace {
  animation-composition: replace;
}
#add {
  animation-composition: add;
}
#accumulate {
  animation-composition: accumulate;
}

Result

  • With replace, the final effect value for the transform property in the 0%, 20% keyframe is translateX(100px) (completely replacing the underlying value translateX(30px) rotate(45deg)). In this case, the element rotates from 45deg to 0deg as it animates from the default value set on the element itself to the non-rotated value set at the 0% mark. This is the default behavior.
  • With add, the final effect value for the transform property in the 0%, 20% keyframe is translateX(30px) rotate(45deg) followed by translateX(100px). So the element is moved 30px to the right, rotated 45deg, then translated 100px more along the redirected X axis.
  • With accumulate, the final effect value in the 0%, 20% keyframe is translateX(130px) rotate(45deg). This means that the two X-axis translation values of 30px and 100px are combined or "accumulated".

Specifications

Specification
CSS Animations Level 2
# animation-composition

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also