How to make fadeOut effect with pure JavaScript

I'm trying to make fade out effect for a div with pure JavaScript.

This is what I'm currently using:

//Imagine I want to fadeOut an element with id = "target"
function fadeOutEffect()
{
 var fadeTarget = document.getElementById("target");
 var fadeEffect = setInterval(function() {
  if (fadeTarget.style.opacity < 0.1)
  {
   clearInterval(fadeEffect);
  }
  else
  {
   fadeTarget.style.opacity -= 0.1;
  }
 }, 200);
}

The div should fade out smoothly, but it immediately disappears.

What's wrong? How can I solve it?

jsbin


Solution 1:

Initially when there's no opacity set, the value will be an empty string, which will cause your arithmetic to fail. That is, "" < 0.1 == true and your code goes into the clearInterval branch.

You can default it to 1 and it will work.

function fadeOutEffect() {
    var fadeTarget = document.getElementById("target");
    var fadeEffect = setInterval(function () {
        if (!fadeTarget.style.opacity) {
            fadeTarget.style.opacity = 1;
        }
        if (fadeTarget.style.opacity > 0) {
            fadeTarget.style.opacity -= 0.1;
        } else {
            clearInterval(fadeEffect);
        }
    }, 200);
}

document.getElementById("target").addEventListener('click', fadeOutEffect);
#target {
    height: 100px;
    background-color: red;
}
<div id="target">Click to fade</div>

An empty string seems like it's treated as a 0 by JavaScript when doing arithmetic and comparisons (even though in CSS it treats that empty string as full opacity)

> '' < 0.1
> true

> '' > 0.1
> false


> '' - 0.1
> -0.1

Simpler Approach We can now use CSS transitions to make the fade out happen with a lot less code

const target = document.getElementById("target");

target.addEventListener('click', () => target.style.opacity = '0');
// If you want to remove it from the page after the fadeout
target.addEventListener('transitionend', () => target.remove());
#target {
    height: 100px;
    background-color: red;
    transition: opacity 1s;
}
<p>Some text before<p>
<div id="target">Click to fade</div>
<p>Some text after</p>

Solution 2:

Just this morning I found this piece of code at http://vanilla-js.com, it's very simple, compact and fast:

var s = document.getElementById('thing').style;
s.opacity = 1;
(function fade(){(s.opacity-=.1)<0?s.display="none":setTimeout(fade,40)})();

You can change the speed of the fade changing the second parameter in the setTimeOut function.

var s = document.getElementById('thing').style;
s.opacity = 1;
(function fade(){(s.opacity-=.1)<0?s.display="none":setTimeout(fade,40)})();
#thing {
  background: red;
  line-height: 40px;
}
<div id="thing">I will fade...</div>

Solution 3:

It looks like you can do it another way(I may be wrong).

event.target.style.transition = '0.8s';
event.target.style.opacity = 0;

Solution 4:

you can use CSS transition property rather than doing vai timer in javascript. thats more performance oriented compared to what you are doing.

check

http://fvsch.com/code/transition-fade/test5.html#test3

Solution 5:

function fadeOutEffect() {
    var fadeTarget = document.getElementById("target");
    var fadeEffect = setInterval(function () {
        if (!fadeTarget.style.opacity) {
            fadeTarget.style.opacity = 1;
        }
        if (fadeTarget.style.opacity > 0) {
            fadeTarget.style.opacity -= 0.1;
        } else {
            clearInterval(fadeEffect);
        }
    }, 200);
}

document.getElementById("target").addEventListener('click', fadeOutEffect);
#target {
    height: 100px;
    background-color: red;
}
<div id="target">Click to fade</div>