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awesome-copilot/skills/gsap-framer-scroll-animation/SKILL.md
Utkarsh patrikar 2273ed1987 feat: refine gsap-framer-scroll-animation skill and references (#1284)
* feat: refine gsap-framer-scroll-animation skill and references

* fix: address review comments for gsap-framer-scroll-animation skill
2026-04-10 09:59:10 +10:00

6.2 KiB

name, description
name description
gsap-framer-scroll-animation Use this skill whenever the user wants to build scroll animations, scroll effects, parallax, scroll-triggered reveals, pinned sections, horizontal scroll, text animations, or any motion tied to scroll position — in vanilla JS, React, or Next.js. Covers GSAP ScrollTrigger (pinning, scrubbing, snapping, timelines, horizontal scroll, ScrollSmoother, matchMedia) and Framer Motion / Motion v12 (useScroll, useTransform, useSpring, whileInView, variants). Use this skill even if the user just says "animate on scroll", "fade in as I scroll", "make it scroll like Apple", "parallax effect", "sticky section", "scroll progress bar", or "entrance animation". Also triggers for Copilot prompt patterns for GSAP or Framer Motion code generation. Pairs with the premium-frontend-ui skill for creative philosophy and design-level polish.

GSAP & Framer Motion — Scroll Animations Skill

Production-grade scroll animations with GitHub Copilot prompts, ready-to-use code recipes, and deep API references.

Design Companion: This skill provides the technical implementation for scroll-driven motion. For the creative philosophy, design principles, and premium aesthetics that should guide how and when to animate, always cross-reference the premium-frontend-ui skill. Together they form a complete approach: premium-frontend-ui decides the what and why; this skill delivers the how.

Quick Library Selector

Need Use
Vanilla JS, Webflow, Vue GSAP
Pinning, horizontal scroll, complex timelines GSAP
React / Next.js, declarative style Framer Motion
whileInView entrance animations Framer Motion
Both in same Next.js app See notes in references

Read the relevant reference file for full recipes and Copilot prompts:

  • GSAPreferences/gsap.md — ScrollTrigger API, all recipes, React integration
  • Framer Motionreferences/framer.md — useScroll, useTransform, all recipes

Setup (Always Do First)

GSAP

npm install gsap
import gsap from 'gsap';
import { ScrollTrigger } from 'gsap/ScrollTrigger';
gsap.registerPlugin(ScrollTrigger); // MUST call before any ScrollTrigger usage

Framer Motion (Motion v12, 2025)

npm install motion   # new package name since mid-2025
# or: npm install framer-motion  — still works, same API
import { motion, useScroll, useTransform, useSpring } from 'motion/react';
// legacy: import { motion } from 'framer-motion'  — also valid

Workflow

  1. Interpret the user's intent to identify if GSAP or Framer Motion is the best fit.
  2. Read the relevant reference document in references/ for detailed APIs and patterns.
  3. Suggest the required package installation if not already present.
  4. Implement the scaffold for the animation structure, adhering to the requested format (React components, hook requirements, or vanilla JS).
  5. Apply the correct tools (scrolling vs in-view elements) ensuring accessibility options are present and hooks don't cause infinite re-renders.

The 5 Most Common Scroll Patterns

Quick reference — full recipes with Copilot prompts are in the reference files.

1. Fade-in on enter (GSAP)

gsap.from('.card', {
  opacity: 0, y: 50, stagger: 0.15, duration: 0.8,
  scrollTrigger: { trigger: '.card', start: 'top 85%' }
});

2. Fade-in on enter (Framer Motion)

<motion.div
  initial={{ opacity: 0, y: 40 }}
  whileInView={{ opacity: 1, y: 0 }}
  viewport={{ once: true, margin: '-80px' }}
  transition={{ duration: 0.6 }}
/>

3. Scrub / scroll-linked (GSAP)

gsap.to('.hero-img', {
  scale: 1.3, opacity: 0, ease: 'none',
  scrollTrigger: { trigger: '.hero', start: 'top top', end: 'bottom top', scrub: true }
});

4. Scroll-linked (Framer Motion)

const { scrollYProgress } = useScroll({ target: ref, offset: ['start end', 'end start'] });
const y = useTransform(scrollYProgress, [0, 1], [0, -100]);
return <motion.div style={{ y }} />;

5. Pinned timeline (GSAP)

const tl = gsap.timeline({
  scrollTrigger: { trigger: '.section', pin: true, scrub: 1, start: 'top top', end: '+=200%' }
});
tl.from('.title', { opacity: 0, y: 60 }).from('.img', { scale: 0.85 });

Critical Rules (Apply Always)

  • GSAP: always call gsap.registerPlugin(ScrollTrigger) before using it
  • GSAP scrub: always use ease: 'none' — easing feels wrong when scrub is active
  • GSAP React: use useGSAP from @gsap/react, never plain useEffect — it auto-cleans ScrollTriggers
  • GSAP debug: add markers: true during development; remove before production
  • Framer: useTransform output must go into style prop of a motion.* element, not a plain div
  • Framer Next.js: always add 'use client' at top of any file using motion hooks
  • Both: animate only transform and opacity — avoid width, height, box-shadow
  • Accessibility: always check prefers-reduced-motion — see each reference file for patterns
  • Premium polish: follow the premium-frontend-ui skill principles for motion timing, easing curves, and restraint — animation should enhance, never overwhelm

Copilot Prompting Tips

  • Give Copilot the full selector, base image, and scroll range upfront — vague prompts produce vague code
  • For GSAP, always specify: selector, start/end strings, whether you want scrub or toggleActions
  • For Framer, always specify: which hook (useScroll vs whileInView), offset values, what to transform
  • Paste the exact error message when asking /fix — Copilot fixes are dramatically better with real errors
  • Use @workspace scope in Copilot Chat so it reads your existing component structure

Reference Files

File Contents
references/gsap.md Full ScrollTrigger API reference, 10 recipes, React (useGSAP), Lenis, matchMedia, accessibility
references/framer.md Full useScroll / useTransform API, 8 recipes, variants, Motion v12 notes, Next.js tips
Skill Relationship
premium-frontend-ui Creative philosophy, design principles, and aesthetic guidelines — defines when and why to animate