keyframekit 1.1.0 → 1.1.2

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package/README.md CHANGED
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
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  # <img src="/docs/docs/public/icon.png" width="30px" height="40px"> [KeyframeKit][1]
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- Intuitive, powerful and lightweight tools for working with CSS animations in JavaScript.
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+ Unlock fine-grained control over your CSS animations with JavaScript.
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  ## About
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- While working with the [Web Animations API][2], I was surprised there wasn't an easy way to import animation keyframes directly from your CSS. You had to re-define them in JS, using a completely different format. So I wrote a typed, spec-compliant library to convert from one to the other, letting you play your CSS-defined animations right in JS. Along the way, I also added some other useful utilities for working with the API. [Read more.][3]
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+ The [Web Animations API][2] opens the browser's animation engine to developers and provides unprecedented control and performance when animating on the web. But confusingly, it provides no easy way to use your existing CSS animations with the API. So I wrote a typed, spec-compliant library to convert stylesheet keyframes to Web Animations API-compatible animations, letting you play your CSS-defined animations right in JS. [Read more.][3]
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  ## Installation
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@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ export default defineConfig({
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  ],
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  title: "KeyframeKit",
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- description: "Intuitive, powerful and lightweight tools for working with CSS animations in JavaScript.",
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+ description: "Unlock fine-grained control over your CSS animations with JavaScript.",
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  themeConfig: {
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  outline: [2, 3],
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  hero:
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  name: KeyframeKit
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- tagline: Intuitive, powerful and lightweight tools for working with CSS animations in JavaScript.
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+ tagline: Unlock fine-grained control over your CSS animations with JavaScript.
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  actions:
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  - theme: brand
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  text: Get Started
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  ## About
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- While working with the [Web Animations API][1], I was surprised there wasn't an easy way to import animation keyframes directly from your CSS. You had to re-define them in JS, using a completely different format. So I wrote a typed, spec-compliant library to convert from one to the other, letting you play your CSS-defined animations right in JS. Along the way, I also added some other useful utilities for working with the API. [Read more.][2]
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+ The [Web Animations API][2] opens the browser's animation engine to developers and provides unprecedented control and performance when animating on the web. But confusingly, it provides no easy way to use your existing CSS animations with the API. So I wrote a typed, spec-compliant library to convert stylesheet keyframes to Web Animations API-compatible animations, letting you play your CSS-defined animations right in JS. [Read more.][3]
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  ## Installation
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package/package.json CHANGED
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  {
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  "name": "keyframekit",
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- "version": "1.1.0",
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- "description": "Intuitive, powerful and lightweight tools for working with CSS animations in JavaScript.",
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+ "version": "1.1.2",
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+ "description": "Unlock fine-grained control over your CSS animations with JavaScript.",
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  "main": "./dist/KeyframeKit.js",
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  "scripts": {
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  "build": "npx tsc",