A morphing dropdown that animates according to the size of its content.

A few weeks ago stripe.com launched a new website design. It looks awesome. One thing we dig in particular is the morphing navigation dropdown: instead of hiding and showing a new dropdown “container” when the user switches from one navigation item to the other, they animate the dropdown background to make space for different content sizes.

We thought it would be interesting to explain how this effect is achieved, therefore we created our own version of Stripe navigation.

Original version: Stripe.com

Icons: Nucleoapp.com

Creating the structure

The HTML structure is composed of two main elements: the nav.main-nav for the top navigation items and the div.morph-dropdown-wrapper wrapping the dropdown elements.

For each list item in the nav.main-nav element, a li.dropdown is created inside the .morph-dropdown-wrapper .

<header class="cd-morph-dropdown"> <a href="#0" class="nav-trigger">Open Nav<span aria-hidden="true"></span></a> <nav class="main-nav"> <ul> <li class="has-dropdown gallery" data-content="about"> <a href="#0">About</a> </li> <li class="has-dropdown links" data-content="pricing"> <a href="#0">Pricing</a> </li> <li class="has-dropdown button" data-content="contact"> <a href="#0">Contact</a> </li> </ul> </nav> <div class="morph-dropdown-wrapper"> <div class="dropdown-list"> <ul> <li id="about" class="dropdown gallery"> <!-- dropdown content here --> </li> <li id="pricing" class="dropdown links"> <!-- dropdown content here --> </li> <li id="contact" class="dropdown button"> <!-- dropdown content here --> </li> </ul> <div class="bg-layer" aria-hidden="true"></div> </div> <!-- dropdown-list --> </div> <!-- morph-dropdown-wrapper --> </header>

An additional div.bg-layer has been created inside the div.morph-dropdown-wrapper and is used to create the dropdown morphing background.

Adding style

On small devices, the div.morph-dropdown-wrapper is hidden by default; when a user clicks the menu icon, the .nav-open class is added to the .cd-morph-dropdown to reveal the navigation.

.cd-morph-dropdown { position: relative; } .cd-morph-dropdown .morph-dropdown-wrapper { display: none; position: absolute; top: 60px; left: 0; width: 100%; } .cd-morph-dropdown.nav-open .morph-dropdown-wrapper { display: block; }

On bigger devices (viewport width more than 1000px), the .dropdown-list and the li.dropdown elements are hidden by default.

@media only screen and (min-width: 1000px) { .cd-morph-dropdown .dropdown-list { position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; visibility: hidden; } .cd-morph-dropdown .dropdown { position: absolute; left: 0; top: 0; opacity: 0; visibility: hidden; width: 100%; transition: opacity .3s, visibility .3s; } }

When a user hovers over one of the elements inside the nav.main-nav , the .is-dropdown-visible class is added to the .cd-morph-dropdown and the .dropdown-list visibility is changed to visible. At this point, the dropdown wrapper is visible, but its content is still hidden. To reveal the content selected by the user, the .active class is added to the selected li.dropdown element (the one with an id equal to the data-content of the navigation item the user is hovering over).

@media only screen and (min-width: 1000px) { .cd-morph-dropdown .dropdown.active { opacity: 1; visibility: visible; } }

Since the li.dropdown elements have an absolute position, they do not actually take space inside their parent ( div.dropdown-list ), that means the div.dropdown-list width and height do not change according to the visible content. Since its overflow property is set to hidden (so that no content is visible outside the dropdown wrapper), we use JavaScript to change its height and width to make sure the selected dropdown content is always visible.

To create the dropdown background, we use the div.bg-layer . It has an absolute position, width and height equal to 1px and opacity of zero. When the .is-dropdown-visible class is added to the .cd-morph-dropdown , its opacity is changed to one and it is scaled up (using JavaScrip) to fit the visible content area.

@media only screen and (min-width: 1000px) { .cd-morph-dropdown .bg-layer { /* morph dropdown background */ position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; height: 1px; width: 1px; background: #FFFFFF; opacity: 0; transition: opacity .3s; transform-origin: top left; } .cd-morph-dropdown.is-dropdown-visible .bg-layer { opacity: 1; transition: transform .3s, opacity .3s; } }

When the user moves from a navigation item to a different one, the scaleX and scaleY values of the div.bg-layer are changed (using JavaScript) to create the morph effect.

Events handling

To implement this navigation, we created a morphDropdown object and used the bindEvents method to attach event handlers to the proper elements.

function morphDropdown( element ) { this.element = element; this.mainNavigation = this.element.find('.main-nav'); this.mainNavigationItems = this.mainNavigation.find('.has-dropdown'); this.dropdownList = this.element.find('.dropdown-list'); //... this.bindEvents(); }

The bindEvents method is used to detect the mouseenter/mouseleave events on the .has-dropdown and .dropdown elements.

morphDropdown.prototype.bindEvents = function() { var self = this; this.mainNavigationItems.mouseenter(function(event){ //hover over one of the nav items -> show dropdown self.showDropdown($(this)); }).mouseleave(function(){ //if not hovering over a nav item or a dropdown -> hide dropdown if( self.mainNavigation.find('.has-dropdown:hover').length == 0 && self.element.find('.dropdown-list:hover').length == 0 ) self.hideDropdown(); }); //... };

The showDropdown method takes care of changing the height, width and translateX values of the .dropdown-list and to scale up/down the .bg-layer element.