The bars in this animation receive scale animations that create a dynamic data visualization effect. When working with layers named "bar US," "bar Italy," and "bar France," you can leverage the timeline's search functionality to streamline your workflow. With no layers selected, typing "bar" in the search field filters the timeline to display only those bar layers—a powerful organizational tool that remains active until you clear the search term.
However, this search behavior changes dramatically based on your layer selection. The search field operates in two distinct modes: when a layer is selected, it searches within that specific layer's properties and keyframes. When no layer is selected, it searches across all layer names in your composition. This dual functionality can initially confuse users, but understanding this logic will significantly accelerate your workflow.
For example, selecting a text layer and searching for "scale" will isolate and highlight the scale property for that specific layer. This targeted search proves invaluable when working with complex compositions containing dozens of animated properties. Conversely, searching with no selection active searches layer names throughout your entire project.
The animation instructions call for a straightforward one-second scale animation applied to each bar element. This technique works effectively for data visualization projects where you need synchronized timing across multiple elements. Begin by selecting all three bar layers simultaneously, then navigate to the Properties panel where you'll find the scale property set to 100% by default.
A crucial step involves unlinking the scale constraints, which allows you to animate horizontal and vertical scaling independently. This flexibility proves essential for bar chart animations where you typically want to scale only along one axis. With all three layers selected, setting the initial keyframe to zero percent horizontal scale creates the foundation for your animation, with keyframes automatically applied across all selected layers.
Understanding anchor points becomes critical at this stage, as all transformations—scaling, rotation, and position changes—occur relative to each layer's anchor point. By default, most imported layers position their anchor point at the geometric center, which works well for uniform scaling but may require adjustment for specific animation effects.
Repositioning anchor points requires the Pan Behind tool, located adjacent to the Rotate tool in the main toolbar. Unlike the Selection tool, which moves the entire layer, the Pan Behind tool specifically targets the anchor point while keeping the layer's visual position unchanged. This distinction often trips up newcomers, but mastering this tool unlocks precise control over transformation origins.
Note that anchor point adjustments must be made individually for each layer—there's no batch processing option. Enable snapping to ensure precise positioning, particularly when aligning anchor points to specific edges or corners of your bar elements. For pendulum-style rotations, position the anchor point at the top; for organic scaling effects, center positioning typically works best.
Recent software updates have streamlined this process considerably. The current beta versions include an auto-reset anchor point controller directly within the Properties panel, eliminating much of the manual positioning work. While this feature hasn't reached the stable release as of 2026, it represents the software's evolution toward more intuitive anchor point management.
When applying animation presets to your bar chart project, exercise caution with layering effects. Animation presets are additive rather than replacement-based, meaning each new preset compounds with existing animations and effects. This behavior can create unexpected interactions between preset elements, potentially compromising your intended animation.
The safest workflow involves testing presets individually with immediate undo options. Since identifying specific preset components—whether they're effects, animators, or keyframe data—requires significant detective work, the undo approach saves considerable troubleshooting time. This methodical testing ensures your bar chart animations maintain their intended clean, professional appearance without unwanted preset interference.