PropertyAnimation QML Type

Animates changes in property values. More...

Import Statement: import QtQuick 2.12
Inherits:

Animation

Inherited By:

ColorAnimation, NumberAnimation, RotationAnimation, and Vector3dAnimation

Properties

Detailed Description

PropertyAnimation provides a way to animate changes to a property's value.

It can be used to define animations in a number of ways:

  • In a Transition

    For example, to animate any objects that have changed their x or y properties as a result of a state change, using an InOutQuad easing curve:

    Rectangle {
        id: rect
        width: 100; height: 100
        color: "red"
    
        states: State {
            name: "moved"
            PropertyChanges { target: rect; x: 50 }
        }
    
        transitions: Transition {
            PropertyAnimation { properties: "x,y"; easing.type: Easing.InOutQuad }
        }
    }
  • In a Behavior

    For example, to animate all changes to a rectangle's x property:

    Rectangle {
        width: 100; height: 100
        color: "red"
    
        Behavior on x { PropertyAnimation {} }
    
        MouseArea { anchors.fill: parent; onClicked: parent.x = 50 }
    }
  • As a property value source

    For example, to repeatedly animate the rectangle's x property:

    Rectangle {
        width: 100; height: 100
        color: "red"
    
        SequentialAnimation on x {
            loops: Animation.Infinite
            PropertyAnimation { to: 50 }
            PropertyAnimation { to: 0 }
        }
    }
  • In a signal handler

    For example, to fade out theObject when clicked:

    MouseArea {
        anchors.fill: theObject
        onClicked: PropertyAnimation { target: theObject; property: "opacity"; to: 0 }
    }
  • Standalone

    For example, to animate rect's width property over 500ms, from its current width to 30:

    Rectangle {
        id: theRect
        width: 100; height: 100
        color: "red"
    
        // this is a standalone animation, it's not running by default
        PropertyAnimation { id: animation;
                            target: theRect;
                            property: "width";
                            to: 30;
                            duration: 500 }
    
        MouseArea { anchors.fill: parent; onClicked: animation.running = true }
    }

Depending on how the animation is used, the set of properties normally used will be different. For more information see the individual property documentation, as well as the Animation and Transitions in Qt Quick introduction.

Note that PropertyAnimation inherits the abstract Animation type. This includes additional properties and methods for controlling the animation.

See also Animation and Transitions in Qt Quick and Qt Quick Examples - Animation.

Property Documentation

duration : int

This property holds the duration of the animation, in milliseconds.

The default value is 250.


easing group

easing.type : enumeration

easing.amplitude : real

easing.overshoot : real

easing.period : real

easing.bezierCurve : list<real>

Specifies the easing curve used for the animation

To specify an easing curve you need to specify at least the type. For some curves you can also specify amplitude, period and/or overshoot (more details provided after the table). The default easing curve is Easing.Linear.

PropertyAnimation { properties: "y";
                    easing.type: Easing.InOutElastic;
                    easing.amplitude: 2.0;
                    easing.period: 1.5 }

Available types are:

Easing.LinearEasing curve for a linear (t) function: velocity is constant.
Easing.InQuadEasing curve for a quadratic (t^2) function: accelerating from zero velocity.
Easing.OutQuadEasing curve for a quadratic (t^2) function: decelerating to zero velocity.
Easing.InOutQuadEasing curve for a quadratic (t^2) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.
Easing.OutInQuadEasing curve for a quadratic (t^2) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.
Easing.InCubicEasing curve for a cubic (t^3) function: accelerating from zero velocity.
Easing.OutCubicEasing curve for a cubic (t^3) function: decelerating to zero velocity.
Easing.InOutCubicEasing curve for a cubic (t^3) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.
Easing.OutInCubicEasing curve for a cubic (t^3) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.
Easing.InQuartEasing curve for a quartic (t^4) function: accelerating from zero velocity.
Easing.OutQuartEasing curve for a quartic (t^4) function: decelerating to zero velocity.
Easing.InOutQuartEasing curve for a quartic (t^4) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.
Easing.OutInQuartEasing curve for a quartic (t^4) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.
Easing.InQuintEasing curve for a quintic (t^5) function: accelerating from zero velocity.
Easing.OutQuintEasing curve for a quintic (t^5) function: decelerating to zero velocity.
Easing.InOutQuintEasing curve for a quintic (t^5) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.
Easing.OutInQuintEasing curve for a quintic (t^5) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.
Easing.InSineEasing curve for a sinusoidal (sin(t)) function: accelerating from zero velocity.
Easing.OutSineEasing curve for a sinusoidal (sin(t)) function: decelerating to zero velocity.
Easing.InOutSineEasing curve for a sinusoidal (sin(t)) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.
Easing.OutInSineEasing curve for a sinusoidal (sin(t)) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.
Easing.InExpoEasing curve for an exponential (2^t) function: accelerating from zero velocity.
Easing.OutExpoEasing curve for an exponential (2^t) function: decelerating to zero velocity.
Easing.InOutExpoEasing curve for an exponential (2^t) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.
Easing.OutInExpoEasing curve for an exponential (2^t) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.
Easing.InCircEasing curve for a circular (sqrt(1-t^2)) function: accelerating from zero velocity.
Easing.OutCircEasing curve for a circular (sqrt(1-t^2)) function: decelerating to zero velocity.
Easing.InOutCircEasing curve for a circular (sqrt(1-t^2)) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.
Easing.OutInCircEasing curve for a circular (sqrt(1-t^2)) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.
Easing.InElasticEasing curve for an elastic (exponentially decaying sine wave) function: accelerating from zero velocity.
The peak amplitude can be set with the amplitude parameter, and the period of decay by the period parameter.
Easing.OutElasticEasing curve for an elastic (exponentially decaying sine wave) function: decelerating to zero velocity.
The peak amplitude can be set with the amplitude parameter, and the period of decay by the period parameter.
Easing.InOutElasticEasing curve for an elastic (exponentially decaying sine wave) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.
Easing.OutInElasticEasing curve for an elastic (exponentially decaying sine wave) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.
Easing.InBackEasing curve for a back (overshooting cubic function: (s+1)*t^3 - s*t^2) easing in: accelerating from zero velocity.
Easing.OutBackEasing curve for a back (overshooting cubic function: (s+1)*t^3 - s*t^2) easing out: decelerating to zero velocity.
Easing.InOutBackEasing curve for a back (overshooting cubic function: (s+1)*t^3 - s*t^2) easing in/out: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.
Easing.OutInBackEasing curve for a back (overshooting cubic easing: (s+1)*t^3 - s*t^2) easing out/in: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.
Easing.InBounceEasing curve for a bounce (exponentially decaying parabolic bounce) function: accelerating from zero velocity.
Easing.OutBounceEasing curve for a bounce (exponentially decaying parabolic bounce) function: decelerating to zero velocity.
Easing.InOutBounceEasing curve for a bounce (exponentially decaying parabolic bounce) function easing in/out: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.
Easing.OutInBounceEasing curve for a bounce (exponentially decaying parabolic bounce) function easing out/in: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.
Easing.BezierCustom easing curve defined by the easing.bezierCurve property.

easing.amplitude is only applicable for bounce and elastic curves (curves of type Easing.InBounce, Easing.OutBounce, Easing.InOutBounce, Easing.OutInBounce, Easing.InElastic, Easing.OutElastic, Easing.InOutElastic or Easing.OutInElastic).

easing.overshoot is only applicable if easing.type is: Easing.InBack, Easing.OutBack, Easing.InOutBack or Easing.OutInBack.

easing.period is only applicable if easing.type is: Easing.InElastic, Easing.OutElastic, Easing.InOutElastic or Easing.OutInElastic.

easing.bezierCurve is only applicable if easing.type is: Easing.Bezier. This property is a list<real> containing groups of three points defining a curve from 0,0 to 1,1 - control1, control2, end point: [cx1, cy1, cx2, cy2, endx, endy, ...]. The last point must be 1,1.

See the Easing Curves for a demonstration of the different easing settings.


exclude : list<Object>

This property holds the items not to be affected by this animation.

See also PropertyAnimation::targets.


from : variant

This property holds the starting value for the animation.

If the PropertyAnimation is defined within a Transition or Behavior, this value defaults to the value defined in the starting state of the Transition, or the current value of the property at the moment the Behavior is triggered.

See also Animation and Transitions in Qt Quick.


properties : string

These properties are used as a set to determine which properties should be animated. The singular and plural forms are functionally identical, e.g.

NumberAnimation { target: theItem; property: "x"; to: 500 }

has the same meaning as

NumberAnimation { targets: theItem; properties: "x"; to: 500 }

The singular forms are slightly optimized, so if you do have only a single target/property to animate you should try to use them.

The targets property allows multiple targets to be set. For example, this animates the x property of both itemA and itemB:

NumberAnimation { targets: [itemA, itemB]; properties: "x"; to: 500 }

In many cases these properties do not need to be explicitly specified, as they can be inferred from the animation framework:

Value Source / BehaviorWhen an animation is used as a value source or in a Behavior, the default target and property name to be animated can both be inferred.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    NumberAnimation on x { to: 500; loops: Animation.Infinite } //animate theRect's x property
    Behavior on y { NumberAnimation {} } //animate theRect's y property
}
TransitionWhen used in a transition, a property animation is assumed to match all targets but no properties. In practice, that means you need to specify at least the properties in order for the animation to do anything.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    Item { id: uselessItem }
    states: State {
        name: "state1"
        PropertyChanges { target: theRect; x: 200; y: 200; z: 4 }
        PropertyChanges { target: uselessItem; x: 10; y: 10; z: 2 }
    }
    transitions: Transition {
        //animate both theRect's and uselessItem's x and y to their final values
        NumberAnimation { properties: "x,y" }

        //animate theRect's z to its final value
        NumberAnimation { target: theRect; property: "z" }
    }
}
StandaloneWhen an animation is used standalone, both the target and property need to be explicitly specified.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    //need to explicitly specify target and property
    NumberAnimation { id: theAnim; target: theRect; property: "x"; to: 500 }
    MouseArea {
        anchors.fill: parent
        onClicked: theAnim.start()
    }
}

As seen in the above example, properties is specified as a comma-separated string of property names to animate.

See also exclude and Animation and Transitions in Qt Quick.


property : string

These properties are used as a set to determine which properties should be animated. The singular and plural forms are functionally identical, e.g.

NumberAnimation { target: theItem; property: "x"; to: 500 }

has the same meaning as

NumberAnimation { targets: theItem; properties: "x"; to: 500 }

The singular forms are slightly optimized, so if you do have only a single target/property to animate you should try to use them.

The targets property allows multiple targets to be set. For example, this animates the x property of both itemA and itemB:

NumberAnimation { targets: [itemA, itemB]; properties: "x"; to: 500 }

In many cases these properties do not need to be explicitly specified, as they can be inferred from the animation framework:

Value Source / BehaviorWhen an animation is used as a value source or in a Behavior, the default target and property name to be animated can both be inferred.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    NumberAnimation on x { to: 500; loops: Animation.Infinite } //animate theRect's x property
    Behavior on y { NumberAnimation {} } //animate theRect's y property
}
TransitionWhen used in a transition, a property animation is assumed to match all targets but no properties. In practice, that means you need to specify at least the properties in order for the animation to do anything.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    Item { id: uselessItem }
    states: State {
        name: "state1"
        PropertyChanges { target: theRect; x: 200; y: 200; z: 4 }
        PropertyChanges { target: uselessItem; x: 10; y: 10; z: 2 }
    }
    transitions: Transition {
        //animate both theRect's and uselessItem's x and y to their final values
        NumberAnimation { properties: "x,y" }

        //animate theRect's z to its final value
        NumberAnimation { target: theRect; property: "z" }
    }
}
StandaloneWhen an animation is used standalone, both the target and property need to be explicitly specified.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    //need to explicitly specify target and property
    NumberAnimation { id: theAnim; target: theRect; property: "x"; to: 500 }
    MouseArea {
        anchors.fill: parent
        onClicked: theAnim.start()
    }
}

As seen in the above example, properties is specified as a comma-separated string of property names to animate.

See also exclude and Animation and Transitions in Qt Quick.


target : Object

These properties are used as a set to determine which properties should be animated. The singular and plural forms are functionally identical, e.g.

NumberAnimation { target: theItem; property: "x"; to: 500 }

has the same meaning as

NumberAnimation { targets: theItem; properties: "x"; to: 500 }

The singular forms are slightly optimized, so if you do have only a single target/property to animate you should try to use them.

The targets property allows multiple targets to be set. For example, this animates the x property of both itemA and itemB:

NumberAnimation { targets: [itemA, itemB]; properties: "x"; to: 500 }

In many cases these properties do not need to be explicitly specified, as they can be inferred from the animation framework:

Value Source / BehaviorWhen an animation is used as a value source or in a Behavior, the default target and property name to be animated can both be inferred.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    NumberAnimation on x { to: 500; loops: Animation.Infinite } //animate theRect's x property
    Behavior on y { NumberAnimation {} } //animate theRect's y property
}
TransitionWhen used in a transition, a property animation is assumed to match all targets but no properties. In practice, that means you need to specify at least the properties in order for the animation to do anything.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    Item { id: uselessItem }
    states: State {
        name: "state1"
        PropertyChanges { target: theRect; x: 200; y: 200; z: 4 }
        PropertyChanges { target: uselessItem; x: 10; y: 10; z: 2 }
    }
    transitions: Transition {
        //animate both theRect's and uselessItem's x and y to their final values
        NumberAnimation { properties: "x,y" }

        //animate theRect's z to its final value
        NumberAnimation { target: theRect; property: "z" }
    }
}
StandaloneWhen an animation is used standalone, both the target and property need to be explicitly specified.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    //need to explicitly specify target and property
    NumberAnimation { id: theAnim; target: theRect; property: "x"; to: 500 }
    MouseArea {
        anchors.fill: parent
        onClicked: theAnim.start()
    }
}

As seen in the above example, properties is specified as a comma-separated string of property names to animate.

See also exclude and Animation and Transitions in Qt Quick.


targets : list<Object>

These properties are used as a set to determine which properties should be animated. The singular and plural forms are functionally identical, e.g.

NumberAnimation { target: theItem; property: "x"; to: 500 }

has the same meaning as

NumberAnimation { targets: theItem; properties: "x"; to: 500 }

The singular forms are slightly optimized, so if you do have only a single target/property to animate you should try to use them.

The targets property allows multiple targets to be set. For example, this animates the x property of both itemA and itemB:

NumberAnimation { targets: [itemA, itemB]; properties: "x"; to: 500 }

In many cases these properties do not need to be explicitly specified, as they can be inferred from the animation framework:

Value Source / BehaviorWhen an animation is used as a value source or in a Behavior, the default target and property name to be animated can both be inferred.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    NumberAnimation on x { to: 500; loops: Animation.Infinite } //animate theRect's x property
    Behavior on y { NumberAnimation {} } //animate theRect's y property
}
TransitionWhen used in a transition, a property animation is assumed to match all targets but no properties. In practice, that means you need to specify at least the properties in order for the animation to do anything.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    Item { id: uselessItem }
    states: State {
        name: "state1"
        PropertyChanges { target: theRect; x: 200; y: 200; z: 4 }
        PropertyChanges { target: uselessItem; x: 10; y: 10; z: 2 }
    }
    transitions: Transition {
        //animate both theRect's and uselessItem's x and y to their final values
        NumberAnimation { properties: "x,y" }

        //animate theRect's z to its final value
        NumberAnimation { target: theRect; property: "z" }
    }
}
StandaloneWhen an animation is used standalone, both the target and property need to be explicitly specified.
Rectangle {
    id: theRect
    width: 100; height: 100
    color: Qt.rgba(0,0,1)
    //need to explicitly specify target and property
    NumberAnimation { id: theAnim; target: theRect; property: "x"; to: 500 }
    MouseArea {
        anchors.fill: parent
        onClicked: theAnim.start()
    }
}

As seen in the above example, properties is specified as a comma-separated string of property names to animate.

See also exclude and Animation and Transitions in Qt Quick.


to : variant

This property holds the end value for the animation.

If the PropertyAnimation is defined within a Transition or Behavior, this value defaults to the value defined in the end state of the Transition, or the value of the property change that triggered the Behavior.

See also Animation and Transitions in Qt Quick.


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