diff options
author | Bernhard Posselt <dev@bernhard-posselt.com> | 2014-11-18 17:13:56 +0100 |
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committer | Bernhard Posselt <dev@bernhard-posselt.com> | 2014-11-18 17:13:56 +0100 |
commit | c4d9c7a30adf34aa52bf5e7736b25264203b838c (patch) | |
tree | 81ecdb761071719e2bf16d077f42121c53d98b46 /js/vendor/angular-animate/angular-animate.js | |
parent | a2e3490f8ee635c5edf9b951b55c3795aab3d075 (diff) |
fix #365
Diffstat (limited to 'js/vendor/angular-animate/angular-animate.js')
-rw-r--r-- | js/vendor/angular-animate/angular-animate.js | 2136 |
1 files changed, 2136 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/js/vendor/angular-animate/angular-animate.js b/js/vendor/angular-animate/angular-animate.js new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8d8a3622e --- /dev/null +++ b/js/vendor/angular-animate/angular-animate.js @@ -0,0 +1,2136 @@ +/** + * @license AngularJS v1.3.3 + * (c) 2010-2014 Google, Inc. http://angularjs.org + * License: MIT + */ +(function(window, angular, undefined) {'use strict'; + +/* jshint maxlen: false */ + +/** + * @ngdoc module + * @name ngAnimate + * @description + * + * The `ngAnimate` module provides support for JavaScript, CSS3 transition and CSS3 keyframe animation hooks within existing core and custom directives. + * + * <div doc-module-components="ngAnimate"></div> + * + * # Usage + * + * To see animations in action, all that is required is to define the appropriate CSS classes + * or to register a JavaScript animation via the myModule.animation() function. The directives that support animation automatically are: + * `ngRepeat`, `ngInclude`, `ngIf`, `ngSwitch`, `ngShow`, `ngHide`, `ngView` and `ngClass`. Custom directives can take advantage of animation + * by using the `$animate` service. + * + * Below is a more detailed breakdown of the supported animation events provided by pre-existing ng directives: + * + * | Directive | Supported Animations | + * |----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|--------------------------------------------------------------------------| + * | {@link ng.directive:ngRepeat#animations ngRepeat} | enter, leave and move | + * | {@link ngRoute.directive:ngView#animations ngView} | enter and leave | + * | {@link ng.directive:ngInclude#animations ngInclude} | enter and leave | + * | {@link ng.directive:ngSwitch#animations ngSwitch} | enter and leave | + * | {@link ng.directive:ngIf#animations ngIf} | enter and leave | + * | {@link ng.directive:ngClass#animations ngClass} | add and remove (the CSS class(es) present) | + * | {@link ng.directive:ngShow#animations ngShow} & {@link ng.directive:ngHide#animations ngHide} | add and remove (the ng-hide class value) | + * | {@link ng.directive:form#animation-hooks form} & {@link ng.directive:ngModel#animation-hooks ngModel} | add and remove (dirty, pristine, valid, invalid & all other validations) | + * | {@link module:ngMessages#animations ngMessages} | add and remove (ng-active & ng-inactive) | + * | {@link module:ngMessages#animations ngMessage} | enter and leave | + * + * You can find out more information about animations upon visiting each directive page. + * + * Below is an example of how to apply animations to a directive that supports animation hooks: + * + * ```html + * <style type="text/css"> + * .slide.ng-enter, .slide.ng-leave { + * -webkit-transition:0.5s linear all; + * transition:0.5s linear all; + * } + * + * .slide.ng-enter { } /* starting animations for enter */ + * .slide.ng-enter.ng-enter-active { } /* terminal animations for enter */ + * .slide.ng-leave { } /* starting animations for leave */ + * .slide.ng-leave.ng-leave-active { } /* terminal animations for leave */ + * </style> + * + * <!-- + * the animate service will automatically add .ng-enter and .ng-leave to the element + * to trigger the CSS transition/animations + * --> + * <ANY class="slide" ng-include="..."></ANY> + * ``` + * + * Keep in mind that, by default, if an animation is running, any child elements cannot be animated + * until the parent element's animation has completed. This blocking feature can be overridden by + * placing the `ng-animate-children` attribute on a parent container tag. + * + * ```html + * <div class="slide-animation" ng-if="on" ng-animate-children> + * <div class="fade-animation" ng-if="on"> + * <div class="explode-animation" ng-if="on"> + * ... + * </div> + * </div> + * </div> + * ``` + * + * When the `on` expression value changes and an animation is triggered then each of the elements within + * will all animate without the block being applied to child elements. + * + * ## Are animations run when the application starts? + * No they are not. When an application is bootstrapped Angular will disable animations from running to avoid + * a frenzy of animations from being triggered as soon as the browser has rendered the screen. For this to work, + * Angular will wait for two digest cycles until enabling animations. From there on, any animation-triggering + * layout changes in the application will trigger animations as normal. + * + * In addition, upon bootstrap, if the routing system or any directives or load remote data (via $http) then Angular + * will automatically extend the wait time to enable animations once **all** of the outbound HTTP requests + * are complete. + * + * ## CSS-defined Animations + * The animate service will automatically apply two CSS classes to the animated element and these two CSS classes + * are designed to contain the start and end CSS styling. Both CSS transitions and keyframe animations are supported + * and can be used to play along with this naming structure. + * + * The following code below demonstrates how to perform animations using **CSS transitions** with Angular: + * + * ```html + * <style type="text/css"> + * /* + * The animate class is apart of the element and the ng-enter class + * is attached to the element once the enter animation event is triggered + * */ + * .reveal-animation.ng-enter { + * -webkit-transition: 1s linear all; /* Safari/Chrome */ + * transition: 1s linear all; /* All other modern browsers and IE10+ */ + * + * /* The animation preparation code */ + * opacity: 0; + * } + * + * /* + * Keep in mind that you want to combine both CSS + * classes together to avoid any CSS-specificity + * conflicts + * */ + * .reveal-animation.ng-enter.ng-enter-active { + * /* The animation code itself */ + * opacity: 1; + * } + * </style> + * + * <div class="view-container"> + * <div ng-view class="reveal-animation"></div> + * </div> + * ``` + * + * The following code below demonstrates how to perform animations using **CSS animations** with Angular: + * + * ```html + * <style type="text/css"> + * .reveal-animation.ng-enter { + * -webkit-animation: enter_sequence 1s linear; /* Safari/Chrome */ + * animation: enter_sequence 1s linear; /* IE10+ and Future Browsers */ + * } + * @-webkit-keyframes enter_sequence { + * from { opacity:0; } + * to { opacity:1; } + * } + * @keyframes enter_sequence { + * from { opacity:0; } + * to { opacity:1; } + * } + * </style> + * + * <div class="view-container"> + * <div ng-view class="reveal-animation"></div> + * </div> + * ``` + * + * Both CSS3 animations and transitions can be used together and the animate service will figure out the correct duration and delay timing. + * + * Upon DOM mutation, the event class is added first (something like `ng-enter`), then the browser prepares itself to add + * the active class (in this case `ng-enter-active`) which then triggers the animation. The animation module will automatically + * detect the CSS code to determine when the animation ends. Once the animation is over then both CSS classes will be + * removed from the DOM. If a browser does not support CSS transitions or CSS animations then the animation will start and end + * immediately resulting in a DOM element that is at its final state. This final state is when the DOM element + * has no CSS transition/animation classes applied to it. + * + * ### Structural transition animations + * + * Structural transitions (such as enter, leave and move) will always apply a `0s none` transition + * value to force the browser into rendering the styles defined in the setup (.ng-enter, .ng-leave + * or .ng-move) class. This means that any active transition animations operating on the element + * will be cut off to make way for the enter, leave or move animation. + * + * ### Class-based transition animations + * + * Class-based transitions refer to transition animations that are triggered when a CSS class is + * added to or removed from the element (via `$animate.addClass`, `$animate.removeClass`, + * `$animate.setClass`, or by directives such as `ngClass`, `ngModel` and `form`). + * They are different when compared to structural animations since they **do not cancel existing + * animations** nor do they **block successive transitions** from rendering on the same element. + * This distinction allows for **multiple class-based transitions** to be performed on the same element. + * + * In addition to ngAnimate supporting the default (natural) functionality of class-based transition + * animations, ngAnimate also decorates the element with starting and ending CSS classes to aid the + * developer in further styling the element throughout the transition animation. Earlier versions + * of ngAnimate may have caused natural CSS transitions to break and not render properly due to + * $animate temporarily blocking transitions using `0s none` in order to allow the setup CSS class + * (the `-add` or `-remove` class) to be applied without triggering an animation. However, as of + * **version 1.3**, this workaround has been removed with ngAnimate and all non-ngAnimate CSS + * class transitions are compatible with ngAnimate. + * + * There is, however, one special case when dealing with class-based transitions in ngAnimate. + * When rendering class-based transitions that make use of the setup and active CSS classes + * (e.g. `.fade-add` and `.fade-add-active` for when `.fade` is added) be sure to define + * the transition value **on the active CSS class** and not the setup class. + * + * ```css + * .fade-add { + * /* remember to place a 0s transition here + * to ensure that the styles are applied instantly + * even if the element already has a transition style */ + * transition:0s linear all; + * + * /* starting CSS styles */ + * opacity:1; + * } + * .fade-add.fade-add-active { + * /* this will be the length of the animation */ + * transition:1s linear all; + * opacity:0; + * } + * ``` + * + * The setup CSS class (in this case `.fade-add`) also has a transition style property, however, it + * has a duration of zero. This may not be required, however, incase the browser is unable to render + * the styling present in this CSS class instantly then it could be that the browser is attempting + * to perform an unnecessary transition. + * + * This workaround, however, does not apply to standard class-based transitions that are rendered + * when a CSS class containing a transition is applied to an element: + * + * ```css + * /* this works as expected */ + * .fade { + * transition:1s linear all; + * opacity:0; + * } + * ``` + * + * Please keep this in mind when coding the CSS markup that will be used within class-based transitions. + * Also, try not to mix the two class-based animation flavors together since the CSS code may become + * overly complex. + * + * + * ### Preventing Collisions With Third Party Libraries + * + * Some third-party frameworks place animation duration defaults across many element or className + * selectors in order to make their code small and reuseable. This can lead to issues with ngAnimate, which + * is expecting actual animations on these elements and has to wait for their completion. + * + * You can prevent this unwanted behavior by using a prefix on all your animation classes: + * + * ```css + * /* prefixed with animate- */ + * .animate-fade-add.animate-fade-add-active { + * transition:1s linear all; + * opacity:0; + * } + * ``` + * + * You then configure `$animate` to enforce this prefix: + * + * ```js + * $animateProvider.classNamePrefix(/animate-/); + * ``` + * </div> + * + * ### CSS Staggering Animations + * A Staggering animation is a collection of animations that are issued with a slight delay in between each successive operation resulting in a + * curtain-like effect. The ngAnimate module (versions >=1.2) supports staggering animations and the stagger effect can be + * performed by creating a **ng-EVENT-stagger** CSS class and attaching that class to the base CSS class used for + * the animation. The style property expected within the stagger class can either be a **transition-delay** or an + * **animation-delay** property (or both if your animation contains both transitions and keyframe animations). + * + * ```css + * .my-animation.ng-enter { + * /* standard transition code */ + * -webkit-transition: 1s linear all; + * transition: 1s linear all; + * opacity:0; + * } + * .my-animation.ng-enter-stagger { + * /* this will have a 100ms delay between each successive leave animation */ + * -webkit-transition-delay: 0.1s; + * transition-delay: 0.1s; + * + * /* in case the stagger doesn't work then these two values + * must be set to 0 to avoid an accidental CSS inheritance */ + * -webkit-transition-duration: 0s; + * transition-duration: 0s; + * } + * .my-animation.ng-enter.ng-enter-active { + * /* standard transition styles */ + * opacity:1; + * } + * ``` + * + * Staggering animations work by default in ngRepeat (so long as the CSS class is defined). Outside of ngRepeat, to use staggering animations + * on your own, they can be triggered by firing multiple calls to the same event on $animate. However, the restrictions surrounding this + * are that each of the elements must have the same CSS className value as well as the same parent element. A stagger operation + * will also be reset if more than 10ms has passed after the last animation has been fired. + * + * The following code will issue the **ng-leave-stagger** event on the element provided: + * + * ```js + * var kids = parent.children(); + * + * $animate.leave(kids[0]); //stagger index=0 + * $animate.leave(kids[1]); //stagger index=1 + * $animate.leave(kids[2]); //stagger index=2 + * $animate.leave(kids[3]); //stagger index=3 + * $animate.leave(kids[4]); //stagger index=4 + * + * $timeout(function() { + * //stagger has reset itself + * $animate.leave(kids[5]); //stagger index=0 + * $animate.leave(kids[6]); //stagger index=1 + * }, 100, false); + * ``` + * + * Stagger animations are currently only supported within CSS-defined animations. + * + * ## JavaScript-defined Animations + * In the event that you do not want to use CSS3 transitions or CSS3 animations or if you wish to offer animations on browsers that do not + * yet support CSS transitions/animations, then you can make use of JavaScript animations defined inside of your AngularJS module. + * + * ```js + * //!annotate="YourApp" Your AngularJS Module|Replace this or ngModule with the module that you used to define your application. + * var ngModule = angular.module('YourApp', ['ngAnimate']); + * ngModule.animation('.my-crazy-animation', function() { + * return { + * enter: function(element, done) { + * //run the animation here and call done when the animation is complete + * return function(cancelled) { + * //this (optional) function will be called when the animation + * //completes or when the animation is cancelled (the cancelled + * //flag will be set to true if cancelled). + * }; + * }, + * leave: function(element, done) { }, + * move: function(element, done) { }, + * + * //animation that can be triggered before the class is added + * beforeAddClass: function(element, className, done) { }, + * + * //animation that can be triggered after the class is added + * addClass: function(element, className, done) { }, + * + * //animation that can be triggered before the class is removed + * beforeRemoveClass: function(element, className, done) { }, + * + * //animation that can be triggered after the class is removed + * removeClass: function(element, className, done) { } + * }; + * }); + * ``` + * + * JavaScript-defined animations are created with a CSS-like class selector and a collection of events which are set to run + * a javascript callback function. When an animation is triggered, $animate will look for a matching animation which fits + * the element's CSS class attribute value and then run the matching animation event function (if found). + * In other words, if the CSS classes present on the animated element match any of the JavaScript animations then the callback function will + * be executed. It should be also noted that only simple, single class selectors are allowed (compound class selectors are not supported). + * + * Within a JavaScript animation, an object containing various event callback animation functions is expected to be returned. + * As explained above, these callbacks are triggered based on the animation event. Therefore if an enter animation is run, + * and the JavaScript animation is found, then the enter callback will handle that animation (in addition to the CSS keyframe animation + * or transition code that is defined via a stylesheet). + * + * + * ### Applying Directive-specific Styles to an Animation + * In some cases a directive or service may want to provide `$animate` with extra details that the animation will + * include into its animation. Let's say for example we wanted to render an animation that animates an element + * towards the mouse coordinates as to where the user clicked last. By collecting the X/Y coordinates of the click + * (via the event parameter) we can set the `top` and `left` styles into an object and pass that into our function + * call to `$animate.addClass`. + * + * ```js + * canvas.on('click', function(e) { + * $animate.addClass(element, 'on', { + * to: { + * left : e.client.x + 'px', + * top : e.client.y + 'px' + * } + * }): + * }); + * ``` + * + * Now when the animation runs, and a transition or keyframe animation is picked up, then the animation itself will + * also include and transition the styling of the `left` and `top` properties into its running animation. If we want + * to provide some starting animation values then we can do so by placing the starting animations styles into an object + * called `from` in the same object as the `to` animations. + * + * ```js + * canvas.on('click', function(e) { + * $animate.addClass(element, 'on', { + * from: { + * position: 'absolute', + * left: '0px', + * top: '0px' + * }, + * to: { + * left : e.client.x + 'px', + * top : e.client.y + 'px' + * } + * }): + * }); + * ``` + * + * Once the animation is complete or cancelled then the union of both the before and after styles are applied to the + * element. If `ngAnimate` is not present then the styles will be applied immediately. + * + */ + +angular.module('ngAnimate', ['ng']) + + /** + * @ngdoc provider + * @name $animateProvider + * @description + * + * The `$animateProvider` allows developers to register JavaScript animation event handlers directly inside of a module. + * When an animation is triggered, the $animate service will query the $animate service to find any animations that match + * the provided name value. + * + * Requires the {@link ngAnimate `ngAnimate`} module to be installed. + * + * Please visit the {@link ngAnimate `ngAnimate`} module overview page learn more about how to use animations in your application. + * + */ + .directive('ngAnimateChildren', function() { + var NG_ANIMATE_CHILDREN = '$$ngAnimateChildren'; + return function(scope, element, attrs) { + var val = attrs.ngAnimateChildren; + if (angular.isString(val) && val.length === 0) { //empty attribute + element.data(NG_ANIMATE_CHILDREN, true); + } else { + scope.$watch(val, function(value) { + element.data(NG_ANIMATE_CHILDREN, !!value); + }); + } + }; + }) + + //this private service is only used within CSS-enabled animations + //IE8 + IE9 do not support rAF natively, but that is fine since they + //also don't support transitions and keyframes which means that the code + //below will never be used by the two browsers. + .factory('$$animateReflow', ['$$rAF', '$document', function($$rAF, $document) { + var bod = $document[0].body; + return function(fn) { + //the returned function acts as the cancellation function + return $$rAF(function() { + //the line below will force the browser to perform a repaint + //so that all the animated elements within the animation frame + //will be properly updated and drawn on screen. This is + //required to perform multi-class CSS based animations with + //Firefox. DO NOT REMOVE THIS LINE. + var a = bod.offsetWidth + 1; + fn(); + }); + }; + }]) + + .config(['$provide', '$animateProvider', function($provide, $animateProvider) { + var noop = angular.noop; + var forEach = angular.forEach; + var selectors = $animateProvider.$$selectors; + var isArray = angular.isArray; + var isString = angular.isString; + var isObject = angular.isObject; + + var ELEMENT_NODE = 1; + var NG_ANIMATE_STATE = '$$ngAnimateState'; + var NG_ANIMATE_CHILDREN = '$$ngAnimateChildren'; + var NG_ANIMATE_CLASS_NAME = 'ng-animate'; + var rootAnimateState = {running: true}; + + function extractElementNode(element) { + for (var i = 0; i < element.length; i++) { + var elm = element[i]; + if (elm.nodeType == ELEMENT_NODE) { + return elm; + } + } + } + + function prepareElement(element) { + return element && angular.element(element); + } + + function stripCommentsFromElement(element) { + return angular.element(extractElementNode(element)); + } + + function isMatchingElement(elm1, elm2) { + return extractElementNode(elm1) == extractElementNode(elm2); + } + + $provide.decorator('$animate', + ['$delegate', '$$q', '$injector', '$sniffer', '$rootElement', '$$asyncCallback', '$rootScope', '$document', '$templateRequest', + function($delegate, $$q, $injector, $sniffer, $rootElement, $$asyncCallback, $rootScope, $document, $templateRequest) { + + $rootElement.data(NG_ANIMATE_STATE, rootAnimateState); + + // Wait until all directive and route-related templates are downloaded and + // compiled. The $templateRequest.totalPendingRequests variable keeps track of + // all of the remote templates being currently downloaded. If there are no + // templates currently downloading then the watcher will still fire anyway. + var deregisterWatch = $rootScope.$watch( + function() { return $templateRequest.totalPendingRequests; }, + function(val, oldVal) { + if (val !== 0) return; + deregisterWatch(); + + // Now that all templates have been downloaded, $animate will wait until + // the post digest queue is empty before enabling animations. By having two + // calls to $postDigest calls we can ensure that the flag is enabled at the + // very end of the post digest queue. Since all of the animations in $animate + // use $postDigest, it's important that the code below executes at the end. + // This basically means that the page is fully downloaded and compiled before + // any animations are triggered. + $rootScope.$$postDigest(function() { + $rootScope.$$postDigest(function() { + rootAnimateState.running = false; + }); + }); + } + ); + + var globalAnimationCounter = 0; + var classNameFilter = $animateProvider.classNameFilter(); + var isAnimatableClassName = !classNameFilter + ? function() { return true; } + : function(className) { + return classNameFilter.test(className); + }; + + function classBasedAnimationsBlocked(element, setter) { + var data = element.data(NG_ANIMATE_STATE) || {}; + if (setter) { + data.running = true; + data.structural = true; + element.data(NG_ANIMATE_STATE, data); + } + return data.disabled || (data.running && data.structural); + } + + function runAnimationPostDigest(fn) { + var cancelFn, defer = $$q.defer(); + defer.promise.$$cancelFn = function() { + cancelFn && cancelFn(); + }; + $rootScope.$$postDigest(function() { + cancelFn = fn(function() { + defer.resolve(); + }); + }); + return defer.promise; + } + + function parseAnimateOptions(options) { + // some plugin code may still be passing in the callback + // function as the last param for the $animate methods so + // it's best to only allow string or array values for now + if (isObject(options)) { + if (options.tempClasses && isString(options.tempClasses)) { + options.tempClasses = options.tempClasses.split(/\s+/); + } + return options; + } + } + + function resolveElementClasses(element, cache, runningAnimations) { + runningAnimations = runningAnimations || {}; + + var lookup = {}; + forEach(runningAnimations, function(data, selector) { + forEach(selector.split(' '), function(s) { + lookup[s]=data; + }); + }); + + var hasClasses = Object.create(null); + forEach((element.attr('class') || '').split(/\s+/), function(className) { + hasClasses[className] = true; + }); + + var toAdd = [], toRemove = []; + forEach((cache && cache.classes) || [], function(status, className) { + var hasClass = hasClasses[className]; + var matchingAnimation = lookup[className] || {}; + + // When addClass and removeClass is called then $animate will check to + // see if addClass and removeClass cancel each other out. When there are + // more calls to removeClass than addClass then the count falls below 0 + // and then the removeClass animation will be allowed. Otherwise if the + // count is above 0 then that means an addClass animation will commence. + // Once an animation is allowed then the code will also check to see if + // there exists any on-going animation that is already adding or remvoing + // the matching CSS class. + if (status === false) { + //does it have the class or will it have the class + if (hasClass || matchingAnimation.event == 'addClass') { + toRemove.push(className); + } + } else if (status === true) { + //is the class missing or will it be removed? + if (!hasClass || matchingAnimation.event == 'removeClass') { + toAdd.push(className); + } + } + }); + + return (toAdd.length + toRemove.length) > 0 && [toAdd.join(' '), toRemove.join(' ')]; + } + + function lookup(name) { + if (name) { + var matches = [], + flagMap = {}, + classes = name.substr(1).split('.'); + + //the empty string value is the default animation + //operation which performs CSS transition and keyframe + //animations sniffing. This is always included for each + //element animation procedure if the browser supports + //transitions and/or keyframe animations. The default + //animation is added to the top of the list to prevent + //any previous animations from affecting the element styling + //prior to the element being animated. + if ($sniffer.transitions || $sniffer.animations) { + matches.push($injector.get(selectors[''])); + } + + for (var i=0; i < classes.length; i++) { + var klass = classes[i], + selectorFactoryName = selectors[klass]; + if (selectorFactoryName && !flagMap[klass]) { + matches.push($injector.get(selectorFactoryName)); + flagMap[klass] = true; + } + } + return matches; + } + } + + function animationRunner(element, animationEvent, className, options) { + //transcluded directives may sometimes fire an animation using only comment nodes + //best to catch this early on to prevent any animation operations from occurring + var node = element[0]; + if (!node) { + return; + } + + if (options) { + options.to = options.to || {}; + options.from = options.from || {}; + } + + var classNameAdd; + var classNameRemove; + if (isArray(className)) { + classNameAdd = className[0]; + classNameRemove = className[1]; + if (!classNameAdd) { + className = classNameRemove; + animationEvent = 'removeClass'; + } else if (!classNameRemove) { + className = classNameAdd; + animationEvent = 'addClass'; + } else { + className = classNameAdd + ' ' + classNameRemove; + } + } + + var isSetClassOperation = animationEvent == 'setClass'; + var isClassBased = isSetClassOperation + || animationEvent == 'addClass' + || animationEvent == 'removeClass' + || animationEvent == 'animate'; + + var currentClassName = element.attr('class'); + var classes = currentClassName + ' ' + className; + if (!isAnimatableClassName(classes)) { + return; + } + + var beforeComplete = noop, + beforeCancel = [], + before = [], + afterComplete = noop, + afterCancel = [], + after = []; + + var animationLookup = (' ' + classes).replace(/\s+/g,'.'); + forEach(lookup(animationLookup), function(animationFactory) { + var created = registerAnimation(animationFactory, animationEvent); + if (!created && isSetClassOperation) { + registerAnimation(animationFactory, 'addClass'); + registerAnimation(animationFactory, 'removeClass'); + } + }); + + function registerAnimation(animationFactory, event) { + var afterFn = animationFactory[event]; + var beforeFn = animationFactory['before' + event.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + event.substr(1)]; + if (afterFn || beforeFn) { + if (event == 'leave') { + beforeFn = afterFn; + //when set as null then animation knows to skip this phase + afterFn = null; + } + after.push({ + event: event, fn: afterFn + }); + before.push({ + event: event, fn: beforeFn + }); + return true; + } + } + + function run(fns, cancellations, allCompleteFn) { + var animations = []; + forEach(fns, function(animation) { + animation.fn && animations.push(animation); + }); + + var count = 0; + function afterAnimationComplete(index) { + if (cancellations) { + (cancellations[index] || noop)(); + if (++count < animations.length) return; + cancellations = null; + } + allCompleteFn(); + } + + //The code below adds directly to the array in order to work with + //both sync and async animations. Sync animations are when the done() + //operation is called right away. DO NOT REFACTOR! + forEach(animations, function(animation, index) { + var progress = function() { + afterAnimationComplete(index); + }; + switch (animation.event) { + case 'setClass': + cancellations.push(animation.fn(element, classNameAdd, classNameRemove, progress, options)); + break; + case 'animate': + cancellations.push(animation.fn(element, className, options.from, options.to, progress)); + break; + case 'addClass': + cancellations.push(animation.fn(element, classNameAdd || className, progress, options)); + break; + case 'removeClass': + cancellations.push(animation.fn(element, classNameRemove || className, progress, options)); + break; + default: + cancellations.push(animation.fn(element, progress, options)); + break; + } + }); + + if (cancellations &&a |