Super excited to announce that I will be creating a 'Rive for Web' course in 2025. We're just touching the tip of the iceberg here! bit.ly/4dVpgRa Also, I want to reiterate: "Should you overuse these new abilities? No, not every project needs insane buttons that animate. However, they're very fun to integrate into creative projects where this sort of thing makes sense."
Could you expand on the performance and accessibility of adding Rive animations to a website? I'm thinking about things like (1) progressive enhancement, (2) beginning with an actual button on the page first, (3) preloading, (4) can *.riv be replaced with *.json, (5) use of CSS variables to control the size, color, duration, and so on and so forth. It's concerning that they chose their own file format (again, thanks, Lottie). In corporate environments, unknown file types are usually blocked from being delivered or sent by the server and clients on the network, and we've been running into these issues more and more lately. If not blocked by network protection policies, it often needs to be added as an allowed file and mime type to the various CMS and other systems used to manage the website. (The file format thing obviously hurts me a bit.)
Super excited to announce that I will be creating a 'Rive for Web' course in 2025. We're just touching the tip of the iceberg here! bit.ly/4dVpgRa
Also, I want to reiterate: "Should you overuse these new abilities? No, not every project needs insane buttons that animate. However, they're very fun to integrate into creative projects where this sort of thing makes sense."
Wonderful! More of this please! Keep up
Could you expand on the performance and accessibility of adding Rive animations to a website? I'm thinking about things like (1) progressive enhancement, (2) beginning with an actual button on the page first, (3) preloading, (4) can *.riv be replaced with *.json, (5) use of CSS variables to control the size, color, duration, and so on and so forth.
It's concerning that they chose their own file format (again, thanks, Lottie). In corporate environments, unknown file types are usually blocked from being delivered or sent by the server and clients on the network, and we've been running into these issues more and more lately. If not blocked by network protection policies, it often needs to be added as an allowed file and mime type to the various CMS and other systems used to manage the website. (The file format thing obviously hurts me a bit.)
Very cool. 🤘 Would love to see how to create an accessible version of this too.
😮😮🤩amazing
Cool
poor developers who's gonna make code out of them 😅
There is no code involved. That’s the point of using Rive