This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.
The Web Animations API dictionary AnimationEffectTimingProperties's iterations property specifies the number of times the animation should repeat. The default value is 1, indicating that it should only play once, but you can set it to any floating-point value (including positive Infinity defaults to 1, and can also take a value of Infinity to make it loop infinitely.
Element.animate(), KeyframeEffectReadOnly(), and KeyframeEffect() all accept an object of timing properties including iterations. The value of iterations corresponds directly to AnimationEffectTimingReadOnly.iterations in timing objects returned by AnimationEffectReadOnly, KeyframeEffectReadOnly, and KeyframeEffect.
var timingProperties = {
iterations: numberOfIterations
};
timingProperties.iterations = numberOfIterations;
A floating-point value specifying the number of times the animation sequence will play through. Any value from 0 (don't play the animation at all) to positive Infinity (run the animation indefinitely) is supported. Defaults to 1, meaning the animation sequence plays through once then stops automatically.
TypeErrorNaN. The property's value is left unchanged.In the Forgotten Key example, Alice waves her arm up and down the entire time the page is open by passing Infinity as the value for her iterations property:
// Get Alice's arm, and wave it up and down
document.getElementById("alice_arm").animate([
{ transform: 'rotate(10deg)' },
{ transform: 'rotate(-40deg)' }
], {
easing: 'steps(2, end)',
iterations: Infinity,
direction: 'alternate',
duration: 600
}); | Specification | Status | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Web Animations The definition of 'iterations' in that specification. | Working Draft | Editor's draft. |
| Feature | Chrome | Firefox (Gecko) | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari (WebKit) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic support | (Yes) | 48 (48)[1] | No support | (Yes) | No support |
| Feature | Android | Android Webview | Chrome for Android | Firefox Mobile (Gecko) | Firefox OS | IE Mobile | Opera Mobile | Safari Mobile |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic support | ? | ? | ? | 48.0 (48)[1] | ? | No support | No support | No support |
[1] The Web Animations API is only enabled by default in Firefox Developer Edition and Nightly builds. You can enable it in beta and release builds by setting the preference dom.animations-api.core.enabled to true, and can disable it in any Firefox version by setting this preference to false.
Element.animate(), KeyframeEffectReadOnly(), and KeyframeEffect() all accept an object of timing properties including this one.AnimationEffectTimingReadOnly (which is the timing object for AnimationEffectReadOnly, KeyframeEffectReadOnly, and KeyframeEffect).animation-iteration-count
© 2005–2018 Mozilla Developer Network and individual contributors.
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/AnimationEffectTimingProperties/iterations