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CSS Animating SVG with CSS Transitions and Transforms Transform Origin in Firefox

Tarik Hamilton
Tarik Hamilton
6,799 Points

I'm guessing using pixels for transform-origin makes it not responsive?

The Firefox solution is basically not responsive?

3 Answers

Tarik Hamilton
Tarik Hamilton
6,799 Points

Hi Walter. I understand that, but the Firefox solution used fixed lengths, rather than relative ones. I'm just wondering, what is Treehouse's suggestion on using transform-origin across browsers.

I was thinking about that too, there should be another way to do it. PD: Firefox always complicating my work.

Gabbie Metheny
Gabbie Metheny
33,778 Points

Guil answered a similar question here and said that it should scale properly in any size viewport. I tried resizing the browser, as well as testing on an iPhone in Chrome dev tools, and it all looks the same. I'm new to SVGs, but I would guess it has to do with how SVGs handle the cx and cy attributes.

Walter Perez
Walter Perez
11,383 Points

Hello Tarik, let's see if I can help you.

Css has 2 types of lengths, relatives, and absolutes.

Relatives, are relatives to other length. (em, rem, %).

Absolutes, are fixed lengths.(px,cm,pt). Then whatever u use with.. won't be responsive.

Regards

So is there a way to make it responsive? Thanks

armand Rodriguez
armand Rodriguez
7,830 Points

I'm just curious if there is a remedy for this, since this was the question that kept coming to mind while watching this video. Wouldn't it be better to just use percentages since it works with the majority of browsers?