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<Sequence>

import { SequenceForwardExample } from "../components/SequenceExamples/SequenceForward";

By using a sequence, you can time-shift the display of your components or parts of your animation in the video.

tsx
const MyTrailer = () => {
return (
<>
<Sequence durationInFrames={10}>
<Intro />
</Sequence>
<Sequence from={10}>
<Clip />
</Sequence>
<Sequence from={20}>
<Outro />
</Sequence>
</>
);
};
tsx
const MyTrailer = () => {
return (
<>
<Sequence durationInFrames={10}>
<Intro />
</Sequence>
<Sequence from={10}>
<Clip />
</Sequence>
<Sequence from={20}>
<Outro />
</Sequence>
</>
);
};

All child components inside a <Sequence> will have their value of useCurrentFrame() shifted by the from value.

Using the durationInFrames prop, you can define for how long the children of a <Sequence> should be mounted.

By default, the children of a <Sequence> are wrapped in an <AbsoluteFill> component. If you don't want this behavior, add layout="none" as a prop.

Props

The Sequence component is a high order component and accepts, besides children, the following props:

from

optional (From v3.2.36, required in previous versions)

At which frame it's children should assume the video starts. When the sequence is at frame, it's children are at frame 0. From v3.2.36 onwards, this prop will be optional; by default, it will be 0.

durationInFrames

optional

For how many frames the sequence should be displayed. Children are unmounted if they are not within the time range of display. By default it will be Infinity to avoid limit the duration of the sequence.

name

optional

You can give your sequence a name and it will be shown as the label of the sequence in the timeline of the Remotion Studio. This property is purely for helping you keep track of sequences in the timeline.

layout

optional

Either "absolute-fill" (default) or "none" By default, your sequences will be absolutely positioned, so they will overlay each other. If you would like to opt out of it and handle layouting yourself, pass layout="none". Available since v1.4.

style

optional

CSS styles to be applied to the container. If layout is set to none, there is no container and setting this style is not allowed.

className

optional

A class name to be applied to the container. If layout is set to none, there is no container and setting this style is not allowed.

Cascading

You can nest sequences within each other and they will cascade.
For example, a sequence that starts at frame 60 which is inside a sequence that starts at frame 30 will have it's children start at frame 90.

Examples

All the examples below are based on the following animation of a blue square:


tsx
const MyVideo = () => {
return <BlueSquare />;
};
tsx
const MyVideo = () => {
return <BlueSquare />;
};

Delay

If you would like to delay the content by say 30 frames, you can wrap it in
<Sequence from={30}>.


tsx
const MyVideo = () => {
return (
<Sequence from={30}>
<BlueSquare />
</Sequence>
);
};
tsx
const MyVideo = () => {
return (
<Sequence from={30}>
<BlueSquare />
</Sequence>
);
};

Trim end

We can clip some content so it only stays visible for a certain time by specifying a non-finite durationInFrames number. In this example, we wrap the square in <Sequence durationInFrames={45}> and as you can see, it disappears after 45 frames.


Trim start

To trim the start of some content, we can pass a negative value to from. In this example, we wrap the square in <Sequence from={-15}> and as a result, the animation has already progressed by 15 frames at the start of the video.

Trim and delay

What if you want to trim the start of the content and delay it at the same time? You need to wrap the videos in two sequences. To the inner one we pass a negative start value from={-15} to trim away the first 15 frames of the content, to the outer one we pass a positive value from={30} to then shift it forwards by 30 frames.


tsx
const TrimAndDelayExample: React.FC = () => {
return (
<Sequence from={30}>
<Sequence from={-15}>
<BlueSquare />
</Sequence>
</Sequence>
);
};
tsx
const TrimAndDelayExample: React.FC = () => {
return (
<Sequence from={30}>
<Sequence from={-15}>
<BlueSquare />
</Sequence>
</Sequence>
);
};

Play Sequences sequentially

See the <Series /> helper component, which helps you calculate markup that makes sequences play after each other.

Adding a ref

You can add a React ref to an <Sequence> from version v3.2.13 on. If you use TypeScript, you need to type it with HTMLDivElement:

tsx
const MyComp = () => {
const ref = useRef<HTMLDivElement>(null);
return (
<Sequence from={10} ref={ref}>
{content}
</Sequence>
);
};
tsx
const MyComp = () => {
const ref = useRef<HTMLDivElement>(null);
return (
<Sequence from={10} ref={ref}>
{content}
</Sequence>
);
};

Note for @remotion/three

A <Sequence> by default will return a <div> component which is not allowed inside a <ThreeCanvas>. Avoid an error by passing layout="none" to <Sequence>. Example: <Sequence layout="none">.

See also