mpeg 1 hour ago

How does this compare to the classic css-native parallax effect? Before the scroll timeline APIs you'd use the "perspective" css property to create a container where the z plane is n pixels away from the screen, and then position each layer within it at a different z distance using transform: translateZ

That method is GPU accelerated too, so it is performant compared to some js solutions, and has worked well in every browser for around a decade

I like the idea of the scroll-timeline though, just keen to understand what the advantage is for this

  • iainmerrick 1 hour ago

    I was wondering the same thing. That translateZ is a bit fiddly to get right, so I could believe this is a bit easier to use, maybe? And presumably this could be used for other properties besides position, like colors, opacity or blurs.

  • som 38 minutes ago

    No doubt quite a few folk with the same question. Keen to understand performance tradeoffs.

    Obvious comparison note would be that the "new" method currently enjoys somewhat limited browser support (no Firefox without a flag, and only since Safari 26)

baliex 1 hour ago

That sounds interesting but it would be a whole lot more interesting if the page was itself an example of said effect!

  • dsmurrell 7 minutes ago

    I was also looking for examples.

phelm 1 hour ago
  • frereubu 1 hour ago

    There's me scrolling up and down and thinking "hey, it's not working!" But it's behind a flag on Firefox: https://caniuse.com/?search=view-timeline-name

    • anssip 1 hour ago

      Noticed the same thing. In Mac Safari it works without setting any flags.

    • werdnapk 1 hour ago

      It's been behind a flag for ages. Maybe because of performance issues?

    • WithinReason 58 minutes ago

      tried 4 browsers, didn't work in any of them

      • alpinisme 40 minutes ago

        FWIW it works on iPhone safari

    • wnevets 15 minutes ago

      Doesnt work on any browser for me

  • account42 1 hour ago

    What an age where we need a pile of javascript as well as a bot check to demo a simple CSS trick.

    • zamadatix 23 minutes ago

      The JS and bot check are for making additional functionality, beyond just showing the example, work easily. I.e. editing and sharing edits from a browser. If all you want is a static example, feel free to make it without these things.

  • Mashimo 47 minutes ago

    Only worked for me on mobile (vivaldi android) not on vivaldi / chrome / edge on Desktop.

thomasikzelf 1 hour ago

You can make some really cool stuff with css scroll animations. I used SVG paths with a scroll animated dash offset to draw an image while scrolling. Zero javascript, it feels so smooth. https://thomaswelter.nl (the background)

  • rsyring 13 minutes ago

    Android Firefox: there is no background image.

duskdozer 56 minutes ago

In a world where it's increasingly overlooked, I'm glad the author mentions disabling it respecting user settings. I do think it should be reversed and only enabled with the `@media (prefers-reduced-motion: no-preference)`, but that is the opinion of someone who gets negative value from animations and is bemused by how much dev and compute time is spent on them.

sillyboi 39 minutes ago

It would be awesome to put an interactive example right in the article.

rohitsriram 58 minutes ago

Love the one-variable design where scale and translate stay in sync automatically, just wish Firefox would get off the flag already.