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Start your free trialMax Weir
14,963 PointsUsing transition all vs single property
In this video the photo-overlay was reduced down to just transition: .5s, removing the opacity property. Would it be better to specify the actual property here as wouldn't this cycle through all the transitions until the correct one ( opacity ) is used?
4 Answers
Steven Parker
231,248 PointsI never thought much about it before, but in that same course, I recall it being said that it would be more efficient to transition only the property(ies) that you want affected. I haven't done any performance analysis myself to confirm this, but it makes sense and I've started doing it as a general practice.
Max Weir
14,963 PointsExactly, I think a few videos back he mentioned being specific about the property being animated.
Julia Utenkova
12,024 PointsApparently, CSS transition property uses your laptop CPU to render stuff in browser, not browser resources. I would stick to specific declaration, as you don't know what device your users will have, it could be mobile phone, an old laptop etc. But of course if you have 1-2 animations, you're perfectly fine, but if you're developing something cool and big and hardly animated (like a promo website), then we need to take into account that not everyone has latest devices and they can be affected really hard :(
Graeme Oxley
8,931 PointsOther than it being a performance issue, I am also pretty sure that a good reason to declare the specific properties being transitioned is that without doing so you will be sacrificing a large portion of customization as you won't be able to specify individual properties to transition at different speeds or in different ways (as I am pretty sure that that functionality requires the "transition-property" property to be defined).
From various sites that I have read about transitions, they seem to imply that you MUST declare the transition-properties. However we know this is not 100% true, it does imply that it is a commonly accepted fact that you should always define the properties.