Can the Twitter Bootstrap Carousel plugin fade in and out on slide transition

Solution 1:

Yes. Bootstrap uses CSS transitions so it can be done easily without any Javascript.

The CSS:

.carousel .item {-webkit-transition: opacity 3s; -moz-transition: opacity 3s; -ms-transition: opacity 3s; -o-transition: opacity 3s; transition: opacity 3s;}
.carousel .active.left {left:0;opacity:0;z-index:2;}
.carousel .next {left:0;opacity:1;z-index:1;}

I noticed however that the transition end event was firing prematurely with the default interval of 5s and a fade transition of 3s. Bumping the carousel interval to 8s provides a nice effect.

Very smooth.

Solution 2:

Yes. Although I use the following code.

.carousel.fade
{
    opacity: 1;

    .item
    {
        -moz-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
        -o-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
        -webkit-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
        transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
        left: 0 !important;
        opacity: 0;
        top:0;
        position:absolute;
        width: 100%;
        display:block !important;
        z-index:1;
        &:first-child{
            top:auto;
            position:relative;
        }

        &.active
        {
            opacity: 1;
            -moz-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
            -o-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
            -webkit-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
            transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
            z-index:2;
        }
    }
}

Then change the class on the carousel from "carousel slide" to "carousel fade". This works in safari, chrome, firefox, and IE 10. It will correctly downgrade in IE 9, however, the nice face effect doesn't happen.

Edit: Since this answer has gotten so popular I've added the following which rewritten as pure CSS instead of the above which was LESS:

.carousel.fade {
  opacity: 1;
}
.carousel.fade .item {
  -moz-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
  -o-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
  -webkit-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
  transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
  left: 0 !important;
  opacity: 0;
  top:0;
  position:absolute;
  width: 100%;
  display:block !important;
  z-index:1;
}
.carousel.fade .item:first-child {
  top:auto;
  position:relative;
}
.carousel.fade .item.active {
  opacity: 1;
  -moz-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
  -o-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
  -webkit-transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
  transition: opacity ease-in-out .7s;
  z-index:2;
}

Solution 3:

Yes. Bootstrap uses CSS transitions so it can be done easily without any Javascript. Just use CSS3. Please take a look at

carousel.carousel-fade

in the CSS of the following examples:

  • http://jsfiddle.net/seemly/ww67B/123/
  • http://bootply.com/86170
  • http://codepen.io/Rowno/pen/Afykb

Solution 4:

Came across this issue when using Bootstrap 3. My solution was to add the carousel-fade class to the carousel main DIV and slot the following CSS in, somewhere after the Bootstrap CSS is included:

.carousel-fade .item {
  opacity: 0;
  -webkit-transition: opacity 2s ease-in-out;
  -moz-transition: opacity 2s ease-in-out;
  -ms-transition: opacity 2s ease-in-out;
  -o-transition: opacity 2s ease-in-out;
  transition: opacity 2s ease-in-out;
  left: 0 !important;
}

.carousel-fade .active {
  opacity: 1 !important;
}

.carousel-fade .left {
  opacity: 0 !important;
  -webkit-transition: opacity 0.5s ease-in-out !important;
  -moz-transition: opacity 0.5s ease-in-out !important;
  -ms-transition: opacity 0.5s ease-in-out !important;
  -o-transition: opacity 0.5s ease-in-out !important;
  transition: opacity 0.5s ease-in-out !important;
}

.carousel-fade .carousel-control {
  opacity: 1 !important;
}

The style transitions that Bootstrap applies mean that you have to have the mid-stride transitions (active left, next left) quickly, otherwise the item just ends up disappearing (hence the 1/2 second transition time).

I haven't experimented with adjusting the .item and .left transition times, but they will probably need adjusting proportionally to keep the effect looking nice.