Slide Down On scroll Animation for React
The Slide Down on scroll animation is one of the most commonly used motion effects in modern web interfaces. Move an element downward into view from above its original position. With Flomo, you can generate this animation instantly using AI prompts or visual controls, without writing any animation code.
How Slide Down on scroll Works
This animation uses the CSS transform: translateY property under the hood. When triggered on scroll, the element transitions smoothly between states. Flomo handles all the keyframe generation, easing curves, and timing for you.
Code Example
// Slide down for dropdown
<div data-flomo="slide-down 0.3s ease-out">
<DropdownMenu />
</div>When to Use This Animation
- •Page load entrances where you want elements to appear smoothly
- •Scroll-triggered reveals as users navigate down the page
- •State transitions when component visibility changes
- •Micro-interactions on hover, click, or focus events
Customization Options
| Property | Default | Options |
|---|---|---|
| Duration | 0.5s | 0.1s to 3s |
| Easing | ease-out | ease-in, ease-in-out, linear, cubic-bezier |
| Delay | 0s | 0s to 2s |
| Direction | normal | normal, reverse, alternate |
You can generate this animation with Flomo AI by typing: "slide down on scroll with ease-out" in the prompt field.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I create a slide down on scroll animation in React?
With Flomo, select your target element, type "slide down on scroll" in the AI prompt, and the animation code is generated automatically. No manual keyframe writing required.
Is slide down on scroll animation good for performance?
Yes. Flomo generates animations using CSS transforms and opacity changes that are GPU-accelerated. The transform: translateY property is optimized by browsers for smooth 60fps rendering.
Can I use slide down on scroll with scroll triggers?
Absolutely. Flomo supports scroll-triggered animations out of the box. Add "on scroll" to your AI prompt and the animation will play as the element enters the viewport.