CSS/Javascript is not my strong point so I would like to ask if is possible to change the background-image opacity to, let's say, 0.5.
I have a div with
background-image: url(images/nacho312.png);
background-position: -50px 0px;
background-repeat: no-repeat no-repeat;
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but when I load a certain view it does not look very good, so I want to have a "half-disolve" effect when that view is shown. Is it possible?
Thanks
Here is a start.
var element = document.getElementById('hello'),
targetOpacity = 0.5,
currentOpacity,
interval = false,
interval = setInterval(function() {
currentOpacity = element.getComputedStyle('opacity');
if (currentOpacity > targetOpacity) {
currentOpacity -= 0.1;
element.style.opacity = currentOpacity;
} else {
clearInterval(interval);
}
}, 100);
See it on jsFiddle.
Run this on window.onload = function() { }
or research cross browser on DOM ready events.
Of course, it is much easier with a library like jQuery.
$(function() {
$('hello').fadeTo('slow', 0.5);
});
This relies on your container's children inheriting the opacity. To do it without affecting them is a bit of a pain, as you can't reset children's opacity via opacity: 1
.
If you want to animate smoothly and without doing too much extra work - this is a good task for jQuery (or another, similar library).
With jQuery you could do:
$('#id_of_div').fadeTo('fast', 0.5);
To get a fast animated fade effect on the relevant DIV.
Update: if you want to actually fade the background image, but not any foreground contents of the DIV, this is a lot harder. I'd recommend using one container DIV with position:relative and two inner DIVs with position:absolute; . The first of the inner DIVs can have the background image and a lower z-index than the second of the DIVs, and the second DIV would contain any text, etc. to show in foreground. When needed you can call $('#id_of_first_div').fadeTo('fast', 0.5);
to fade just the DIV containing the background image.
By the way, the literal answer to your question is "No, you cannot animate the opacity of a CSS background image" - you can only (currently) animate the opacity of a DOM element, not its attributes, thus the need for the above hack.
Other Update: if you want to avoid using any third-party library, you can handle the fade of the background DIV using approach in Alex's answer.
background-image: url(images/nacho312.png);
background-position: -50px 0px;
background-repeat: no-repeat no-repeat;
opacity:0.5; //for firefox and chrome
filter:alpha(opacity=50); //for IE
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