Spring Configs

Part of a component's configuration argument, the config prop is an object with many properties that can be used to customize & fine tune your animations. It directly controls how your springs behave and can customized on a spring by spring basis (e.g. opacity and scale could be different for one useSpring hook).

Usage

Basic Usage

Your most typical usage of the config prop is to edit the mass, friction and tension properties.

import { useSpring, animated } from '@react-spring/web'
const MyComponent = () => {
const [springs, api] = useSpring(
() => ({
y: 0,
config: {
mass: 5,
friction: 120,
tension: 120,
},
}),
[]
)
return <animated.div style={springs} />
}

Config per SpringValue

The config prop can also be a function where the argument is the key of the spring value, this is great if you want one spring to control many elements or have properties behave in different ways like a smooth opacity change but a bouncy scale.

import { useSpring, animated } from '@react-spring/web'
const MyComponent = () => {
const [springs, api] = useSpring(
() => ({
backgroundColor: '#00ff00',
y: 0,
config: key => {
if (key === 'y') {
return {
mass: 5,
friction: 120,
tension: 120,
}
}
return {}
},
}),
[]
)
return <animated.div style={springs} />
}

Returning an empty object will enforce the default config options: { mass: 1, tension: 170, friction: 26 }.

Partial Updates

When using the spring api you can partially update your configs. These partial configs are merged with the original config for each call of the api.

import { useSpring, animated } from '@react-spring/web'
const MyComponent = () => {
const [springs, api] = useSpring(
() => ({
y: 0,
config: {
mass: 5,
friction: 120,
tension: 120,
},
}),
[]
)
const handleClick = () => {
api.start({
y: 20,
config: {
friction: 10,
},
})
}
return <animated.div onClick={handleClick} style={springs} />
}

Presets

Additionally to being able to configure your own spring, we export a small selection of presets enclosed in the config named export.

import { config } from '@react-spring/web'

The presets are:

default –
{ tension: 170, friction: 26 }
gentle –
{ tension: 120, friction: 14 }
wobbly –
{ tension: 180, friction: 12 }
stiff –
{ tension: 210, friction: 20 }
slow –
{ tension: 280, friction: 60 }
molasses –
{ tension: 280, friction: 120 }

Config Visualizer

Easings

Easings can only be used in conjunction with the duration property.

Why Springs?

We think of animation in terms of time and curves, but that causes most of the struggle we face when trying to make elements on the screen move naturally, because nothing in the real world moves like that. Springs don’t have a defined curve or a set duration.

As Andy Matuschak (ex Apple UI-Kit developer) expressed – “Animation APIs parameterized by duration and curve are fundamentally opposed to continuous, fluid interactivity.”

Available generic easings

All the following easings are part of the easings object imported like so:

import { easings } from '@react-spring/web'
easeInBackeaseOutBackeaseInOutBack
easeInBounceeaseOutBounceeaseOutBounce
easeInCirceaseOutCirceaseOutCirc
easeInCubiceaseOutCubiceaseOutCubic
easeInElasticeaseOutElasticeaseOutElastic
easeInExpoeaseOutExpoeaseOutExpo
easeInQuadeaseOutQuadeaseOutQuad
easeInQuarteaseOutQuarteaseOutQuart
easeInQuinteaseOutQuinteaseOutQuint
easeInSineeaseOutSineeaseOutSine

Steps easing

This unique easing function returns the standard EasingFunction a config object expects. Its still part of the easings object but you need to set it up before passing.

import { easings } from '@react-spring/web'
const MyComponent = () => {
const [springs, api] = useSpring(
() => ({
y: 0,
config: {
easing: easings.steps(5),
},
}),
[]
)
return <animated.div style={springs} />
}

It can also take a Direction as a second argument, which can be either start or end. The signature for the function is shown below:

export function steps(
steps: number,
direction: Direction = 'end'
): EasingFunction

Reference

PropTypeDefault
massnumber1
tensionnumber170
frictionnumber26
bouncenumber
clampbooleanfalse
precisionnumber0.01
roundboolean
frequencynumber
dampingnumber1
velocitynumber0
restVelocitynumber
decaynumber | booleanfalse
durationnumber
easingfunctiont => t
progressnumber0

Pitfalls

My animation jumps at the end.

In some instances such as animating threejs the items can feel as if they skip the last couple of frames. This is because the precision prop has a default value of 0.01. Try editing this value to be 0.0001 to resolve this.

My animation is bouncing and I just want it to stop.

Sometimes you want a snapping feel so you create a sharp spring. When you animate the spring the animation bounces around, this is because of the physics. An easy solution to this is to set clamp to true. Your spring will stop animating at the point it hit's it's goal value.