Pregunta

I have the following script:

document.querySelector(".img-man").style.webkitAnimation = "";

Which was working on safari 5.1.7 but not on 7.0.2.

Later I changed to this:

document.querySelector(".img-man").style.webkitAnimation = "none";

Which is working fine now.

So, I'm curious to know the difference between "" and "none"

¿Fue útil?

Solución

Setting the property to "none" explicitly disables animation.

Link

Otros consejos

"Then now it's not working in 5.1.7. So, what should I do?"

The issue with "none" not working could perhaps be fixed by using a dummy name:

document.querySelector(".img-man").style.webkitAnimation = "dummy";

As this is done trough JavaScript an alternative could be:

document.querySelector(".img-man").style.removeProperty('-webkit-animation-name');

OK. OP removed this part of the question after I wrote it, but leave it as it might help both him and others.


For the property itself; From Safari documentation we have for webkit-animation the sub property -webkit-animation-name:

-webkit-animation-name

  Specifies the name of an animation.

Syntax

-webkit-animation-name: name [, ...]

Parameters
 name

The name of the animation.

The name is used to select the -webkit-keyframe at-rule that provides the keyframes and property values for the animation. If the name does not match any -webkit-keyframe at-rule, there are no properties to be animated and the animation is not executed. See “@-webkit-keyframes” for a description of this rule.

If "none", no animation is executed even if there is a -webkit-keyframe at-rule with that name. Setting this property to "none" explicitly disables animations.

The default value is "".


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