Making components reusable
React components allow us to encapsulate video logic and reuse the same visuals multiple times.
Consider a title - to make it reusable, factor it out into its own component:
MyComposition.tsxtsximport {AbsoluteFill ,interpolate ,useCurrentFrame } from "remotion";constTitle :React .FC <{title : string }> = ({title }) => {constframe =useCurrentFrame ();constopacity =interpolate (frame , [0, 20], [0, 1], {extrapolateRight : "clamp",});return (<div style ={{opacity ,textAlign : "center",fontSize : "7em" }}>{title }</div >);};export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Title title ="Hello World" /></AbsoluteFill >);};
MyComposition.tsxtsximport {AbsoluteFill ,interpolate ,useCurrentFrame } from "remotion";constTitle :React .FC <{title : string }> = ({title }) => {constframe =useCurrentFrame ();constopacity =interpolate (frame , [0, 20], [0, 1], {extrapolateRight : "clamp",});return (<div style ={{opacity ,textAlign : "center",fontSize : "7em" }}>{title }</div >);};export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Title title ="Hello World" /></AbsoluteFill >);};
To render multiple instances of the title, duplicate the <Title> component.
You can also use the <Sequence> component to limit the duration of the first title and time-shift the appearance of the second title.
tsximport {Sequence } from "remotion";export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Sequence durationInFrames ={40}><Title title ="Hello" /></Sequence ><Sequence from ={40}><Title title ="World" /></Sequence ></AbsoluteFill >);};
tsximport {Sequence } from "remotion";export constMyVideo = () => {return (<AbsoluteFill ><Sequence durationInFrames ={40}><Title title ="Hello" /></Sequence ><Sequence from ={40}><Title title ="World" /></Sequence ></AbsoluteFill >);};
You should see two titles appearing after each other.
Note that the value of useCurrentFrame() has been shifted in the second instance, so that it returns 0 only when the absolute time is 40. Before that, the sequence was not mounted at all.
Sequences by default are absolutely positioned - you can use layout="none" to make them render like a regular <div>.