search
HomeWeb Front-endCSS TutorialSingle Element Loaders: The Spinner

Single Element Loaders: The Spinner

Crafting CSS-only loaders is a rewarding challenge. The mesmerizing infinite animations are always satisfying to create. CodePen showcases a vast array of techniques, but this article focuses on achieving a single-element loader with minimal code.

I've developed over 500 single-div loaders, and this four-part series shares the techniques used. We'll explore numerous examples, demonstrating how subtle adjustments yield diverse results, and how concise the code can be.

Single-Element Loaders series:

  1. Single Element Loaders: The Spinner — you are here
  2. Single Element Loaders: The Dots
  3. Single Element Loaders: The Bars
  4. Single Element Loaders: Going 3D

This first article creates a common loader pattern: spinning bars.

The Approach

A simple approach uses multiple elements (nine, in this case), each representing a bar, within a parent. Opacity and transforms create the spinning effect.

My method, however, uses just one element:

<div></div>

...and 10 CSS declarations:

.loader {
  width: 150px; /* control the size */
  aspect-ratio: 1;
  display: grid;
  mask: conic-gradient(from 22deg, #0003, #000);
  animation: load 1s steps(8) infinite;
}
.loader,
.loader:before {
  --_g: linear-gradient(#17177c 0 0) 50%; /* update the color here */
  background: 
    var(--_g)/34% 8%  space no-repeat,
    var(--_g)/8%  34% no-repeat space;
}
.loader:before {
  content: "";
  transform: rotate(45deg);
}
@keyframes load {
  to { transform: rotate(1turn); }
}

Code Breakdown

The code might seem unusual at first, but it's simpler than it appears. First, we define the element's dimensions – a 150px square. aspect-ratio ensures it remains square regardless of resizing.

.loader {
  width: 150px; /* control the size */
  aspect-ratio: 1; /* maintain square shape */
}

For CSS loaders, a single size control value is ideal. Here, it's the width; all calculations are relative to it. This allows easy size adjustments.

Gradients create the bars. This is the most intricate part. A single gradient generates two bars:

background: linear-gradient(#17177c 0 0) 50%/34% 8% space no-repeat;

The gradient uses one color and two color stops, resulting in a solid color. The size is 34% wide and 8% tall, centered (50%). The space keyword duplicates the gradient, creating two bars.

From the specification:

The image is repeated as often as will fit within the background positioning area without being clipped and then the images are spaced out to fill the area. The first and last images touch the edges of the area.

A 34% width allows only two bars (3 34% > 100%), leaving gaps (100% - 2 34% = 32%). space positions these gaps centrally. A width between 33% and 50% ensures at least two bars with spacing.

We create two more bars using a second gradient, resulting in:

background: 
 linear-gradient(#17177c 0 0) 50%/34% 8%  space no-repeat,
 linear-gradient(#17177c 0 0) 50%/8%  34% no-repeat space;

A CSS variable optimizes this:

--_g: linear-gradient(#17177c 0 0) 50%; /* update the color here */
background: 
 var(--_g)/34% 8%  space no-repeat,
 var(--_g)/8%  34% no-repeat space;

This yields four bars. The CSS variable simplifies color updates.

The .loader element and its ::before pseudo-element create four more bars, totaling eight.

.loader {
  width: 150px; /* control the size */
  aspect-ratio: 1;
  display: grid;
}
.loader,
.loader::before {
  --_g: linear-gradient(#17177c 0 0) 50%; /* update the color here */
  background: 
    var(--_g)/34% 8%  space no-repeat,
    var(--_g)/8%  34% no-repeat space;
}
.loader::before {
  content: "";
  transform: rotate(45deg);
}

display: grid ensures the pseudo-element covers the parent's area, eliminating the need for explicit dimensions.

Rotating the pseudo-element by 45deg positions the remaining bars.

Opacity Control

The effect of a single bar leaving a fading trail is achieved using a CSS mask with a conic-gradient:

mask: conic-gradient(from 22deg,#0003,#000);

This gradient gradually increases transparency clockwise. Applied to the loader, it creates the fading bar illusion. Each bar appears to fade due to the masking, creating the impression of varying opacity.

Rotation Animation

A stepped animation, using steps(8) (where 8 is the number of bars), creates the rotation:

.loader {
  animation: load 3s steps(8) infinite;
}

@keyframes load {
  to { transform: rotate(1turn) }
}

This completes the single-element, minimal-CSS loader. Size and color are easily controlled. Adding a ::after pseudo-element could expand to twelve bars with minor code adjustments. Alternative implementations are also possible, using different gradient and opacity techniques.

Alternative Shapes: Dots

Creating a dot-based loader is similar, using radial gradients instead of linear ones. The core concept of masking for opacity remains the same, but the shapes are circles. Safari compatibility may require gradient adjustments.

Further Examples

Several additional spinner loaders are shown, employing various techniques (gradients, masks, pseudo-elements). These serve as exercises in understanding different approaches.

Conclusion

With a single div, gradients, pseudo-elements, and variables, a variety of spinning loaders can be created. The examples are fundamentally similar, with minor modifications. This is just the beginning; the series will explore more advanced CSS loader techniques.

Single-Element Loaders series:

  1. Single Element Loaders: The Spinner — you are here
  2. Single Element Loaders: The Dots
  3. Single Element Loaders: The Bars
  4. Single Element Loaders: Going 3D

The above is the detailed content of Single Element Loaders: The Spinner. For more information, please follow other related articles on the PHP Chinese website!

Statement
The content of this article is voluntarily contributed by netizens, and the copyright belongs to the original author. This site does not assume corresponding legal responsibility. If you find any content suspected of plagiarism or infringement, please contact admin@php.cn
Next Level CSS Styling for CursorsNext Level CSS Styling for CursorsApr 23, 2025 am 11:04 AM

Custom cursors with CSS are great, but we can take things to the next level with JavaScript. Using JavaScript, we can transition between cursor states, place dynamic text within the cursor, apply complex animations, and apply filters.

Worlds Collide: Keyframe Collision Detection Using Style QueriesWorlds Collide: Keyframe Collision Detection Using Style QueriesApr 23, 2025 am 10:42 AM

Interactive CSS animations with elements ricocheting off each other seem more plausible in 2025. While it’s unnecessary to implement Pong in CSS, the increasing flexibility and power of CSS reinforce Lee's suspicion that one day it will be a

Using CSS backdrop-filter for UI EffectsUsing CSS backdrop-filter for UI EffectsApr 23, 2025 am 10:20 AM

Tips and tricks on utilizing the CSS backdrop-filter property to style user interfaces. You’ll learn how to layer backdrop filters among multiple elements, and integrate them with other CSS graphical effects to create elaborate designs.

SMIL on?SMIL on?Apr 23, 2025 am 09:57 AM

Well, it turns out that SVG's built-in animation features were never deprecated as planned. Sure, CSS and JavaScript are more than capable of carrying the load, but it's good to know that SMIL is not dead in the water as previously

'Pretty' is in the eye of the beholder'Pretty' is in the eye of the beholderApr 23, 2025 am 09:40 AM

Yay, let's jump for text-wrap: pretty landing in Safari Technology Preview! But beware that it's different from how it works in Chromium browsers.

CSS-Tricks Chronicles XLIIICSS-Tricks Chronicles XLIIIApr 23, 2025 am 09:35 AM

This CSS-Tricks update highlights significant progress in the Almanac, recent podcast appearances, a new CSS counters guide, and the addition of several new authors contributing valuable content.

Tailwind's @apply Feature is Better Than it SoundsTailwind's @apply Feature is Better Than it SoundsApr 23, 2025 am 09:23 AM

Most of the time, people showcase Tailwind's @apply feature with one of Tailwind's single-property utilities (which changes a single CSS declaration). When showcased this way, @apply doesn't sound promising at all. So obvio

Feeling Like I Have No Release: A Journey Towards Sane DeploymentsFeeling Like I Have No Release: A Journey Towards Sane DeploymentsApr 23, 2025 am 09:19 AM

Deploying like an idiot comes down to a mismatch between the tools you use to deploy and the reward in complexity reduced versus complexity added.

See all articles

Hot AI Tools

Undresser.AI Undress

Undresser.AI Undress

AI-powered app for creating realistic nude photos

AI Clothes Remover

AI Clothes Remover

Online AI tool for removing clothes from photos.

Undress AI Tool

Undress AI Tool

Undress images for free

Clothoff.io

Clothoff.io

AI clothes remover

Video Face Swap

Video Face Swap

Swap faces in any video effortlessly with our completely free AI face swap tool!

Hot Tools

VSCode Windows 64-bit Download

VSCode Windows 64-bit Download

A free and powerful IDE editor launched by Microsoft

ZendStudio 13.5.1 Mac

ZendStudio 13.5.1 Mac

Powerful PHP integrated development environment

MantisBT

MantisBT

Mantis is an easy-to-deploy web-based defect tracking tool designed to aid in product defect tracking. It requires PHP, MySQL and a web server. Check out our demo and hosting services.

Notepad++7.3.1

Notepad++7.3.1

Easy-to-use and free code editor

mPDF

mPDF

mPDF is a PHP library that can generate PDF files from UTF-8 encoded HTML. The original author, Ian Back, wrote mPDF to output PDF files "on the fly" from his website and handle different languages. It is slower than original scripts like HTML2FPDF and produces larger files when using Unicode fonts, but supports CSS styles etc. and has a lot of enhancements. Supports almost all languages, including RTL (Arabic and Hebrew) and CJK (Chinese, Japanese and Korean). Supports nested block-level elements (such as P, DIV),