gsap-utils
**gsap-utils** provides pure JavaScript helper utilities including clamp, mapRange, normalize, interpolate, random, snap, toArray, wrap, and pipe for math operations, array handling, and value transformations. Use this skill when code needs to constrain values between ranges, map values between input and output ranges, normalize inputs to 0–1, randomize animation parameters, snap values to grids, or chain multiple transformations together, particularly within GSAP animations, ScrollTrigger callbacks, or event handlers.
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/mxyhi/ok-skills /tmp/gsap-utils && cp -r /tmp/gsap-utils/gsap-skills/gsap-utils ~/.claude/skills/gsap-utilsSKILL.md
# gsap.utils
## When to Use This Skill
Apply when writing or reviewing code that uses **gsap.utils** for math, array/collection handling, unit parsing, or value mapping in animations (e.g. mapping scroll to a value, randomizing, snapping to a grid, or normalizing inputs).
**Related skills:** Use with **gsap-core**, **gsap-timeline**, and **gsap-scrolltrigger** when building animations; CustomEase and other easing utilities are in **gsap-plugins**.
## Overview
**gsap.utils** provides pure helpers; no need to register. Use in tween vars (e.g. function-based values), in ScrollTrigger or Observer callbacks, or in any JS that drives GSAP. All are on **gsap.utils** (e.g. `gsap.utils.clamp()`).
**Omitting the value: function form.** Many utils accept the value to transform as the **last** argument. If you omit that argument, the util returns a **function** that accepts the value later. Use the function form when you need to clamp, map, normalize, or snap many values with the same config (e.g. in a mousemove handler or tween callback). **Exception: random()** — pass **true** as the last argument to get a reusable function (do not omit the value); see [random()](https://gsap.com/docs/v3/GSAP/UtilityMethods/random()).
```javascript
// With value: returns the result
gsap.utils.clamp(0, 100, 150); // 100
// Without value: returns a function you call with the value later
let c = gsap.utils.clamp(0, 100);
c(150); // 100
c(-10); // 0
```
## Clamping and Ranges
### clamp(min, max, value?)
Constrains a value between min and max. Omit **value** to get a function: `clamp(min, max)(value)`.
```javascript
gsap.utils.clamp(0, 100, 150); // 100
gsap.utils.clamp(0, 100, -10); // 0
let clampFn = gsap.utils.clamp(0, 100);
clampFn(150); // 100
```
### mapRange(inMin, inMax, outMin, outMax, value?)
Maps a value from one range to another. Use when converting scroll position, progress (0–1), or input range to an animation range. Omit **value** to get a function: `mapRange(inMin, inMax, outMin, outMax)(value)`.
```javascript
gsap.utils.mapRange(0, 100, 0, 500, 50); // 250
gsap.utils.mapRange(0, 1, 0, 360, 0.5); // 180 (progress to degrees)
let mapFn = gsap.utils.mapRange(0, 100, 0, 500);
mapFn(50); // 250
```
### normalize(min, max, value?)
Returns a value normalized to 0–1 for the given range. Inverse of mapping when the target range is 0–1. Omit **value** to get a function: `normalize(min, max)(value)`.
```javascript
gsap.utils.normalize(0, 100, 50); // 0.5
gsap.utils.normalize(100, 300, 200); // 0.5
let normFn = gsap.utils.normalize(0, 100);
normFn(50); // 0.5
```
### interpolate(start, end, progress?)
Interpolates between two values at a given progress (0–1). Handles numbers, colors, and objects with matching keys. Omit **progress** to get a function: `interpolate(start, end)(progress)`.
```javascript
gsap.utils.interpolate(0, 100, 0.5); // 50
gsap.utils.interpolate("#ff0000", "#0000ff", 0.5); // mid color
gsap.utils.interpolate({ x: 0, y: 0 }, { x: 100, y: 50 }, 0.5); // { x: 50, y: 25 }
let lerp = gsap.utils.interpolate(0, 100);
lerp(0.5); // 50
```
## Random and Snap
### random(minimum, maximum[, snapIncrement, returnFunction]) / random(array[, returnFunction])
Returns a random number in the range **minimum**–**maximum**, or a random element from an **array**. Optional **snapIncrement** snaps the result to the nearest multiple (e.g. `5` → multiples of 5). **To get a reusable function**, pass **true** as the last argument (**returnFunction**); the returned function takes no args and returns a new random value each time. This is the only util that uses `true` for the function form instead of omitting the value.
```javascript
// immediate value: number in range
gsap.utils.random(-100, 100); // e.g. 42.7
gsap.utils.random(0, 500, 5); // 0–500, snapped to nearest 5
// reusable function: pass true as last argument
let randomFn = gsap.utils.random(-200, 500, 10, true);
randomFn(); // random value in range, snapped to 10
randomFn(); // another random value
// array: pick one value at random
gsap.utils.random(["red", "blue", "green"]); // "red", "blue", or "green"
let randomFromArray = gsap.utils.random([0, 100, 200], true);
randomFromArray(); // 0, 100, or 200
```
**String form in tween vars:** use `"random(-100, 100)"`, `"random(-100, 100, 5)"`, or `"random([0, 100, 200])"`; GSAP evaluates it per target.
```javascript
gsap.to(".box", { x: "random(-100, 100, 5)", duration: 1 });
gsap.to(".item", { backgroundColor: "random([red, blue, green])" });
```
### snap(snapTo, value?)
Snaps a value to the nearest multiple of **snapTo**, or to the nearest value in an array of allowed values. Omit **value** to get a function: `snap(snapTo)(value)` (or `snap(snapArray)(value)`).
```javascript
gsap.utils.snap(10, 23); // 20
gsap.utils.snap(0.25, 0.7); // 0.75
gsap.utils.snap([0, 100, 200], 150); // 100 or 200 (nearest in array)
let snapFn = gsap.utils.snap(10);
snapFn(23); // 20
```
Use in tweens for grid or step-based animation:
```javascript
gsap.to(".x", { x: 200, snap: { x: 20 } });
```
### shuffle(array)
Returns a new array with the same elements in random order. Use for randomizing order (e.g. stagger from "random" with a copy).
```javascript
gsap.utils.shuffle([1, 2, 3, 4]); // e.g. [3, 1, 4, 2]
```
### distribute(config)
**Returns a function** that assigns a value to each target based on its position in the array (or in a grid). Used internally for advanced staggers; use it whenever you need values spread across many elements (e.g. scale, opacity, x, delay). The returned function receives `(index, target, targets)` — either call it manually or pass the result directly into a tween; GSAP will call it per target with index, element, and array.
**Config (all optional):**
| Property | Type | Description |
|----------|------|-------------|
| `base` | Number | Starting value. Default `0`. |
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