Simple animator using CSS3 animations
An implementation of the abstract Animator interface from templating which enables css-based animations.
Abstract animation generators.
The Animator — session launch and telemetry recording apparatus
Resizable component for React.
A library for finite automata and regular expressions in the context of JS RegExp
Haiku Core is a JavaScript library for building user interfaces
Enhance Reselect selectors with deeper memoization and cache management
Animate elements using CSS classes with support for Angular 2+
Declarative routing for React web applications
A TypeScript animation system grounded in physics with three.js and react support.
Control for iterating over a dimension with a set time between each step.
A react component that loads sprite image and the runs it as an animation
[](https://travis-ci.org/wix/wix-animations)
Hook into request animation frame or setInterval if rAF not available
Monkey patches React to notify you about avoidable re-renders.
Re emit events from another emitter
Transform GLOB patterns to JavaScript regular expressions for fast file path matching.
This library helps making parallax animations on scroll. It is built with performance in mind, as it doesn't need to relayout or paint to operate.
Babel plugin for React Compiler.
Performer act for virtual live production.
The Parlour — multi-turn conversation management apparatus
<p align="center"> <a href="https://amplitude.com" target="_blank" align="center"> <img src="https://static.amplitude.com/lightning/46c85bfd91905de8047f1ee65c7c93d6fa9ee6ea/static/media/amplitude-logo-with-text.4fb9e463.svg" width="280"> </a> <b
AbortController for Node based on EventEmitter
Sammy began as a lightweight Sass animation library, but rapidly turned into a full Sass mixin library. More lightweight than Compass, and simpler than using your own mixins. Sammy also includes several CSS libraries such as Animate.css that have been re-written using the SCSS syntax.
Parade is an open source presentation software that consists of a Sinatra web app that serves up markdown files in a presentation format. Parade can serve a directory or be configured to run with a simple configuration file. * Markdown backed data > This ultimately makes it easier to manage diffs when making changes, using the content in other documents, and quickly re-using portions of a presentation. * Syntax Highlighting > Using GitHub flavored markdown, code fences will automatically be syntax highlighted, making it incredibly easy to integrate code samples. * Code Execution > Slides are able to provide execution and show results for JavaScript and Coffeescript live within the browser. This allows for live demonstrations of code. * Web > Slide presentations are basically websites -- they run in your browser from your desktop. This allows for a wide range of possibilities for customization and expandability. * Basic Templating and Color Schemes > Several templates and color scheme options have been provided to help you get started. While Parade does not currently provide anything near the variety of many other presentation packages, it is well-suited for basic presentations. * Design Flexibility (pros and cons) > Unless you're skilled in CSS/Animations, you will likely have a harder time creating presentations with as much polish as other programs provide. However, this approach also makes Parade incredibly flexible if you do understand CSS/Animations.