I'm working on an iPad app that lets you control different things in a prototype of an intelligent house. For example it lets you turn lights on and off. For this, I have made a UIImageView that shows the floor plan of the house and added UIButtons as subviews for each lamp that can be toggled.
As you can see the buttons are placed perfectly on the floor plan using the setFrame method of each UIButton. However, when I rotate the iPad to portrait orientation, the following happens:
The buttons obviously still have the same origin, however it is not relative to the repositioning of the image.
The floor plan image has the following settings for struts and springs:
and has its content mode set to Aspect Fit.
My question is
how do I dynamically reposition each UIButton, such that it has the same relative position. I figure I have to handle this in the {did/should}AutorotateToInterfaceOrientation delegate method.
It should be noted that the UIImageView is zoomable and to handle this I have implemented the scrollViewDidZoom delegate method as follows:
for (UIView *button in _floorPlanImage.subviews) {
CGRect oldFrame = button.frame;
[button.layer setAnchorPoint:CGPointMake(0.5, 1)];
button.frame = oldFrame;
button.transform = CGAffineTransformMakeScale(1.0/scrollView.zoomScale, 1.0/scrollView.zoomScale);
}
Thank you in advance!
I find the best way to layout subviews is in the - (void) layoutSubviews method. You will have to subclass your UIImageView and override the method.
This method will automatically get called whenever your frame changes and also gets called the first time your view gets presented.
If you put all your layout code in this method, it prevents layout fragmentation and repetition, keeps your view code in your views, and most things just work by default.
Related
I am working on a small application on Mac that I need to create customed cursor and move it. I used NSImageView to implement it. However when I call setFrameOrigin (the same to setFrame) it will leaves images on the previous place.
Here is my code:
#property (nonatomic, strong) NSImageView *eraserView;
this is the define
_eraserView = [[NSImageView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(100, 100, 32, 32)];
_eraserView.image = [NSImage imageNamed:#"EraserCursor"];
[self.view addSubview:_eraserView];
[_eraserView setHidden:YES];
here is the initialization. Everything goes well until now but:
- (void)setImageatPoint:(NSPoint)point
{
[_eraserView setFrameOrigin:point];
}
- (void)hidePenImage
{
[_eraserView setHidden:YES];
}
- (void)unhidePenImage: (BOOL)isEraser
{
[_eraserView setHidden:NO];
}
These are methods I use to change the state of the NSImageView. They will be called by another class using delegate when corresponding events of trackpad occurs.
However every time I change the state of the NSImageView, it seems like it is drawn on the superview.
I debugged it and found there was no extra subviews. And when I use setHidden it has no effect on those tracks. I think it somehow did something to the CALayer, but I have no idea how to fix it.
Screenshots would help but in general if you move a view or change the area of the view that is drawn, you need to redraw.
To do this it kind of depends on how your drawing happens. Calling setNeedsDisplay may not be enough if your implementation of drawRect only draws a sub rect of the view bounds. Cocoa only draws what it is told to draw.
You can erase sections of the view that should be empty by drawing (filling) where it should be empty. That means drawing a color ( NSColor clearColor if nothing else) in the area that was previously drawn.
I'm working on some drawing code. I have that portion working great.
I want to draw over an image, but I want to still be able to see the detail of the image, the black lines, etc.
What I am working on is making a transparent UIImageView that holds the image.
I'm not sure how to get this set up properly though.
Should this be added above the other UIImageView that I color on or below it?
Here's what I have so far:
- (void)viewDidLoad
{
[super viewDidLoad];
topImageView = [[UIImageView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 46, 320, 370)];
[topImageView setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"imagesmall.png"]];
topImageView.alpha = 1.0;
topImageView.layer.opacity = 1.0;
topImageView.layer.opaque = NO;
[self.view addSubview:topImageView];
[topImageView release];
}
Thoughts anyone?
Yes, you can draw views over other views. They are drawn in the order that they're added as subviews, unless you reorder them after that.
You may need to set the opaque property for some views (this is distinct from and overrides their layer opacity), and set their backgroundColor to nil. UIImageView seems to be transparent by default, as long as its image is; some other UIView subclasses are not.
So, just what is your overlay going to be? If you just need to display one image over another, what you have here seems to work already. If you need to draw some lines programmatically, you'll need to do this:
Create a subclass of UIView.
Implement its drawRect method to display the content you need.
When you add your custom view on top of the background image, make sure it is not opaque and has no backgroundColor.
A common problem here is to find that your foreground is working, but the background isn't being loaded properly. To make sure the background is there, set the alpha of the foreground view to 0.5. You won't want to do that in production, but it will allow you to verify that both views exist.
I have a UIView that contains another UIView. The outer UIView draws a border around the inner UIView via drawRect. (The border is too complicated to be drawn via CALayer properties.)
At present, when I animate the resizing of the outer UIView, its drawRect method is called once at the beginning of the animation and the result is stretched or shrunk. This does not look good.
I am looking for a way to either redraw the content at every step of the animation, or find a way to achieve the same visual effect. (The result should be similar to the resizing of a stretchable UIImage.)
You should change view's content type to:
your_view.contentMode = UIViewContentModeRedraw;
And it will redraw each time its frame changes.
I ended up adding subviews with autoresizing masks that kept them positioned correctly during the animation.
You need to send a [UIView setNeedsToDisplay] to the view for every time the frame size is changed, you could try overriding the setFrame: method like
- (void)setFrame:(CGRect)r
{
[super setFrame:r];
[self setNeedsToDisplay];
}
I have created a custom UITableViewCell. My custom cell contents an ImageView for picture of current article. On creation of the cell image will be loaded from Internet and displayed in the UIImageView. How can I fade then downloading process with an ActivityIndicatorView?
I'm sorry for this bad English :-) I use an online translator.
If I'm understanding you correctly, it seems like you want your UIImageView's (that are lazily downloaded in realtime) to fade in once they have fully downloaded. And while they are downloading, display the spinning UIActivityIndicatorView wheel.
Here is what I suggest:
1) Instead of defining the custom view in your table cell as a UIImageView specifically, just use the more generic UIView. This is because both classes (UIImageView and UIActivityIndicatorView) are subclasses and can be set as such.
2) Initially, for any and all cells, set the UIView to the UIActivityIndicatorView (don't forget to use "startAnimating" to get it to spin) and then on the callback function for the download completion, go to the appropriate cell and set that custom UIView to the downloaded UIImageView.
3) To achieve the fade in effect, look at the following code:
// Sets the image completely transparent
imageView.alpha = 0.0f;
// Animates the image to fade in fully over 1.0 second
[UIView animationWithDuration:1.0f animations:^{
imageView.alpha = 1.0f;
}];
4) You might need to call "setNeedsDisplay" on the table cell to refresh it's subviews after setting the new image view, and before animating it.
I have a UIImageView in a UIScrollView in another UIScrollView (based on Apple's
PhotoScroller sample code). When the UIScrollView calls back to its controller to dismiss itself, it calls this method:
- (void)dismiss {
[scrollView removeFromSuperview];
ImageScrollView *isv = [self currentImageScrollView];
UIImage *image = isv.imageView;
image.frame = [self.view convertRect:image.frame fromView:isv];
[self.view insertSubview:image belowSubview:captionView];
[(NSObject *)delegate performSelector:#selector(scrollViewDidClose:)
withObject:self
afterDelay:2.0];
}
Now here's the weird part: the image view jumps to a different position right after this method executes, but before the scollViewDidClose method gets called on the delegate. If the image is larger than its new super view, it jumps so that its left edge is aligned with the left edge of its super view. If it's smaller than its new super view, it jumps to the very center of the view. There is no animation to this change.
So my question is, how do I prevent it from doing that? I've tweaked both the super view (self.view) class and the image view class to see what methods might be called. Neither the frame nor the center is set on the image view after this method is called, and while the layoutSubviews method is called on the super view, that is not what jumps the image to the center or left side of the superview. I've also tried turning off autoResizesSubviews in the super view, and setting the autoresizingMask of the image view to UIViewAutoresizingNone, with no change in behavior.
So where is this happening, and why? And more importantly, how do I make it stop?
I've been beating my head on this for days. Any pointers or guidance would be greatly appreciated.
ImageScrollView is the one centering your UIImageView. Set a breakpoint in ImageScrollView layoutSubviews and you'll see how your UIImageView is being centered.
You're taking ImageScrollView's internal imageView and placing it into another view. That's not going to work because ImageScrollView still retains ownership of that UIImageView instance and is still managing its layout.
You'll either need to copy the image into another UIImageView instance, or you'll need to change ImageScrollView to allow it to relinquish ownership of its imageView.
You're not setting up the frame of the 'image' view when you insert it as a subview. You probably want to do that explicitly if you want the view to appear at a particular position in the scroll view.