tree: 2c4f51379512218a3d7a4ca2b7e9cad89d7299f4 [path history] [tgz]
  1. build/
  2. demo/
  3. parser/
  4. player/
  5. .gitignore
  6. gulpfile.js
  7. README.md
README.md

bodymovin

After Effects plugin for export animations to svg + js library or to canvas + js

##Version 2.0 is out!

  • improved performace
  • better AE features support

Setting up After Effects

  • Close After Effects
  • Look for the ScriptUI Panels in your Adobe AE install folder.For example:
    C:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe After Effects CS6\Support Files\Scripts\ScriptUI Panels
  • Paste the 2 files “bodymovin_parser.jsx” and “helperProject.aep” located in the build/parser/ folder
  • Open After Effects
  • Go to Edit > Preferences > General > and check on “Allow Scripts to Write Files and Access Network”

How it works

After Effects

  • Open your AE project and select the script (bodymovin_parser.jsx) on the Window menu.
  • A Panel will open with a Compositions tab.
  • On the Compositions tab, click Refresh to get a list of all you project Comps.
  • Select the composition you want to export
  • Select Add to Render Queue
  • Select Destination Folder
  • Click Render (render may take a while, depending on the complexity of the animation, and will block AE until it's done. be patient and understanding)
  • look for the exported data.json file (if you had images or AI layers on your animation, there will be a files folder with the exported files)

HTML

  • get the bodymovin.js file from the build/player/ folder
  • include the .js file on your html (remember to zip it for production)
<script src="js/bodymovin.js" type="text/javascript"></script>

You can call bodymovin.loadAnimation() to start an animation. It takes an object as a unique param with:

  • animationData: an Object with the exported animation data.
  • path: the relative path to the animation object. (animationData and path are exclu
  • loop: true / false / number
  • autoplay: true / false it will start playing as soon as it is ready
  • name: animation name for future reference
  • animType: ‘svg’ / ‘canvas’ to set the renderer
  • prerender: true / false to prerender all animation before starting (true recommended)
bodymovin.loadAnimation({
  wrapper: element, // the dom element
  animType: 'svg',
  loop: true,
  autoplay: true,
  animationData: JSON.parse(animationData) // the animation data
});
  • if you want to use an existing canvas to draw, you can pass an extra object: ‘renderer’ with the following configuration:
bodymovin.loadAnimation({
  wrapper: element, // the dom element
  animType: 'svg',
  loop: true,
  autoplay: true,
  animationData: animationData, // the animation data
  renderer: {
    context: canvasContext, // the canvas context
    scaleMode: 'noScale',
    clearCanvas: false
  }
});

If you do this, you will have to handle the canvas clearing after each frame
Another way to load animations is adding some attributes to a dom element. You can include a div and set it's class to bodymovin. If you do it before page load, it will automatically find it. Or you can call bodymovin.searchAnimations() after page load and it will search all elements with the class “bodymovin”

  • add the data.json to a folder relative to the html
  • create a div that will contain the animation.
    Required
    . a class called “bodymovin” . a “data-animation-path” attribute with relative path to the data.json
    Optional
    . a “data-anim-loop” attribute . a “data-name” attribute to specify a name to target play controls specifically
    Example
<div style="width:1067px;height:600px" class="bodymovin" data-animation-path="animation/" data-anim-loop="true" data-name="ninja"></div>

Usage

bodymovin has 6 main methods: bodymovin.play() -- with 1 optional parameter name to target a specific animation
bodymovin.stop() -- with 1 optional parameter name to target a specific animation
bodymovin.setSpeed() -- first param speed (1 is normal speed) -- with 1 optional parameter name to target a specific animation
bodymovin.setDirection() -- first param direction (1 is normal direction.) -- with 1 optional parameter name to target a specific animation
bodymovin.searchAnimations() -- looks for elements with class “bodymovin” bodymovin.registerAnimation() -- you can register an element directly with registerAnimation. It must have the “data-animation-path” attribute pointing at the data.json url

See the demo folders for examples or go to http://codepen.io/airnan/ to see some cool animations

Alerts!

Undos

The script is very invasive to your AE project. It will perform a lot of actions in your project that will go to the undo stack. So you‘ll probably won’t be able to undo your work after exporting. I haven't figured out how to prevent this.

Files

If you have any images or AI layers that you haven't converted to shapes (I recommend that you convert them, so they get exported as vectors, right click each layer and do: “Create shapes from Vector Layers”), they will be added to the render queue and exported. So expect a lot of “render chimes” coming out from your speakers that will scare your cats and wake your neighbours.

Time

If you see AE is not responding, be patient, give it some minutes. There is a lot going on.

Performance

This is real time rendering. Although it is pretty optimized, it always helps if you keep your AE project to what is necessary
More optimizations are on their way, but try not to use huge shapes in AE only to mask a small part of it.
Too many nodes will also affect performance.

Help

If you have any animations that don‘t work or want me to export them, don’t hesitate to write.
I'm really interested in seeing what kind of problems the plugin has.
my email is hernantorrisi@gmail.com

Version

This is version 2. It is pretty stable but let me know if anything comes up.

Examples

http://lab.nearpod.com/bodymovin/demo/miked/
http://lab.nearpod.com/bodymovin/demo/ninja/
http://lab.nearpod.com/bodymovin/demo/shapes/
http://lab.nearpod.com/bodymovin/demo/gatin/

Notes

  • If you want to modify the parser or the player, there are some gulp commands that can simplify the task
  • look at the great animations exported on the demo folder
  • gzipping the animation jsons and the player have a huge impact on the filesize. I recommend doing it if you use it for a project.

Support

  • The script supports precomps, shapes, solids, images, null objects,
  • Text, image sequences, videos and audio are not supported (maybe some of them coming soon)
  • It supports masks and inverted masks (inverted ones only in svg renderer for now) but only in “Add” mode. Maybe other modes will come but it has a huge performance hit.
  • It supports time remapping (yeah!)
  • The script supports shapes, rectangles and ellipses. It doesn't support stars yet.
  • No effects whatsoever. (stroke is on it's way)
  • No expressions (maybe some coming)
  • No layer stretching! No idea why, but stretching a layer messes with all the data.

Coming up

  • Exporting images in a sprite
  • Stroke Effect support
  • Experimenting with the webAnimationAPI export
  • Exporting 3D animations (not vectors because there is no 3d svg support on browsers)