miguelst Posted February 25 Share Posted February 25 I'm wondering if I'm doing something wrong, I followed the examples on StackBlitz (thanks for that), And I got GSAP working inside my Vue/Nuxt component in onMounted. However I'm not sure, how to start a transition when an image is loaded. The following code is working, however if I paste the onMounted code inside the imageLoaded callback, it fails. Is there a certain method to start the transition once an image is loaded? I have 4 images that are being loaded like that. Thanks! const imageLoaded = (el) => { console.log('loaded ', el) } onMounted(() => { ctx.value = gsap.context((self) => { const tl = gsap.timeline({ defaults: { duration: 1, ease: "power4.out", } } ) tl.from('img', {opacity: 0, y: 50}, 0) }, main.value) }); onUnmounted(() => { ctx.value.revert() }); Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GSAP Helper Posted February 25 Share Posted February 25 Without a minimal demo, it's very difficult to troubleshoot; the issue could be caused by CSS, markup, a third party library, a 3rd party script, etc. Would you please provide a very simple CodePen or Stackblitz that illustrates the issue? Please don't include your whole project. Just some colored <div> elements and the GSAP code is best. See if you can recreate the issue with as few dependancies as possible. Start minimal and then incrementally add code bit by bit until it breaks. Usually people solve their own issues during this process! If not, at least we have a reduced test case which greatly increases your chances of getting a relevant answer. See the Pen aYYOdN by GreenSock (@GreenSock) on CodePen that loads all the plugins. Just click "fork" at the bottom right and make your minimal demo: Using a framework/library like React, Vue, Next, etc.? CodePen isn't always ideal for these tools, so here are some Stackblitz starter templates that you can fork and import the gsap-trial NPM package for using any of the bonus plugins: React (please read this article!) Next Svelte Sveltekit Vue Nuxt Please share the StackBlitz link directly to the file in question (where you've put the GSAP code) so we don't need to hunt through all the files. Once we see an isolated demo, we'll do our best to jump in and help with your GSAP-specific questions. ✅ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
miguelst Posted February 25 Author Share Posted February 25 I managed to get it working using the following code, it's my first Nuxt + GSAP implementation, so feel free to correct me if I'm doing something wrong here const main = ref() const imageRefs = ref<Array<any>>([]) const ctx = ref() onMounted(() => { ctx.value = gsap.context((self) => { const tl = gsap.timeline({ defaults: { duration: 1, ease: "power4.out", } }) tl.from(self.selector!('h1'), { autoAlpha: 0, y: 75, }) }, main.value) }) watchEffect(() => { // Wait for all 4 imageRefs to be present if (imageRefs.value.length === 4) { // Reuse the main context ctx.value.add((self: any) => { const tl = gsap.timeline({ defaults: { duration: 2, ease: "power4.out", } } ) tl.from(self.selector!('img'), { autoAlpha: 0, y: 75, stagger: .1, delay: .5 }) }) } }) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Solution Rodrigo Posted February 26 Solution Share Posted February 26 Hi, The only suggestion I have is that there is no need to make the GSAP Context instance a reactive property. Everytime you update it it'll trigger a re-render and Vue will run it's reactive data callbacks in order to see if something else has to be updated, which it doesn't, since there is nothing in your app that depends on the GSAP Context being updated, so just make it a variable and be done with it: let ctx; onMounted(() => { ctx = gsap.context(() => { ... }); }); onUnmounted(() => { ctx && ctx.revert(); }); Hopefully this helps. Happy Tweening! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
miguelst Posted February 26 Author Share Posted February 26 21 minutes ago, Rodrigo said: Hi, The only suggestion I have is that there is no need to make the GSAP Context instance a reactive property. Everytime you update it it'll trigger a re-render and Vue will run it's reactive data callbacks in order to see if something else has to be updated, which it doesn't, since there is nothing in your app that depends on the GSAP Context being updated, so just make it a variable and be done with it: let ctx; onMounted(() => { ctx = gsap.context(() => { ... }); }); onUnmounted(() => { ctx && ctx.revert(); }); Hopefully this helps. Happy Tweening! Thanks @Rodrigo that's a very good point! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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