Rotating UIImageView Moves the Image Off Screen - iphone

I have a simple rotation gesture implemented in my code, but the problem is when I rotate the image it goes off the screen/out of the view always to the right.
The image view that is being rotated center X gets off or increases (hence it going right off the screen out of the view).
I would like it to rotate around the current center, but it's changing for some reason. Any ideas what is causing this?
Code Below:
- (void)viewDidLoad
{
[super viewDidLoad];
CALayer *l = [self.viewCase layer];
[l setMasksToBounds:YES];
[l setCornerRadius:30.0];
self.imgUserPhoto.userInteractionEnabled = YES;
[self.imgUserPhoto setClipsToBounds:NO];
UIRotationGestureRecognizer *rotationRecognizer = [[UIRotationGestureRecognizer alloc] initWithTarget:self action:#selector(rotationDetected:)];
[self.view addGestureRecognizer:rotationRecognizer];
rotationRecognizer.delegate = self;
}
- (void)rotationDetected:(UIRotationGestureRecognizer *)rotationRecognizer
{
CGFloat angle = rotationRecognizer.rotation;
self.imageView.transform = CGAffineTransformRotate(self.imageView.transform, angle);
rotationRecognizer.rotation = 0.0;
}

You want to rotate the image around it's center, but that's not what it is actually happening. Rotation transforms take place around the origin. So what you have to do is to apply a translate transform first to map the origin to the center of the image, and then apply the rotation transform, like so:
self.imageView.transform = CGAffineTransformTranslate(self.imageView.transform, self.imageView.bounds.size.width/2, self.imageView.bounds.size.height/2);
Please note that after rotating you'll probably have to undo the translate transform in order to correctly draw the image.
Hope this helps
Edit:
To quickly answer your question, what you have to do to undo the Translate Transform is to subtract the same difference you add to it in the first place, for example:
// The next line will add a translate transform
self.imageView.transform = CGAffineTransformTranslate(self.imageView.transform, 10, 10);
self.imageView.transform = CGAffineTransformRotate(self.imageView.transform, radians);
// The next line will undo the translate transform
self.imageView.transform = CGAffineTransformTranslate(self.imageView.transform, -10, -10);
However, after creating this quick project I realized that when you apply a rotation transform using UIKit (like the way you're apparently doing it) the rotation actually takes place around the center. It is only when using CoreGraphics that the rotation happens around the origin. So now I'm not sure why your image goes off the screen. Anyway, take a look at the project and see if any code there helps you.
Let me know if you have any more questions.
The 'Firefox' image is drawn using UIKit. The blue rect is drawn using CoreGraphics

You aren't rotating the image around its centre. You'll need correct this manually by translating it back to the correct position

Related

CGAffineTransformMakeTranslation translate to a point rather then by a value.

My question is simple.
Let us say I use this method
CGAffineTransformMakeTranslation(5.0f, 0.0f);
which translates the image view 5 pixels to the right. But is there a similar method that does the exact same thing except takes the destination point as an argument rather then the values you want to move the image view by?
For example, if I wanted to move an image view to 100.0f, 0.0f what would I use?
You can use the following two options:
imgOne.center = CGPointMake(50, 50);
or
imgOne.frame = CGRectMake(50, 50, imgOne.frame.size.width, imgOne.frame.size.height);
If it's the center point you want to move to this coordinate, use:
imageView.center = CGPointMake(100.0f, 0.0f);
If it's one of the corner points, subtract/add half the view's frame's width/height to the coordinates. If you need this frequently, it's a good idea to write a small UIView category that allows you to position a view's corner on a particular coordinate.

Translating a view and the rotating it problem

I have a custom UIImageView, I can drag it around screen by making a translation with (xDif and yDif is the amount fingers moved):
CGAffineTransform translate = CGAffineTransformMakeTranslation(xDif, yDif);
[self setTransform: CGAffineTransformConcat([self transform], translate)];
Let's say I moved the ImageView for 50px in both x and y directions. I then try to rotate the ImageView (via gesture recognizer) with:
CGAffineTransform transform = CGAffineTransformMakeRotation([recognizer rotation]);
myImageView.transform = transform;
What happens is the ImageView suddenly moves to where the ImageView was originally located (before the translation - not from the moved position + 50px in both directions).
(It seems that no matter how I translate the view, the self.center of the ImageView subclass stays the same - where it was originally laid in IB).
Another problem is, if I rotate the ImageView by 30 deg, and then try to rotate it a bit more, it will again start from the original position (angle = 0) and go from there, why wouldn't it start from the angle 30 deg and not 0.
You are overwriting the earlier transform. To add to the current transform, you should do this –
myImageView.transform = CGAffineTransformRotate(myImageView.transform, recognizer.rotation);
Since you're changing the transform property in a serial order, you should use CGAffineTransformRotate, CGAffineTransformTranslate and CGAffineTransformScale instead so that you add to the original transform and not create a new one.

bounds and frames: how do I display part of an UIImage

My goal is simple; I want to create a program that displays an UIImage, and when swiped from bottom to top, displays another UIImage. The images here could be a happy face/sad face. The sad face should be the starting point, the happy face the end point. When swiping your finger the part below the finger should be showing the happy face.
So far I tried solving this with the frame and bounds properties of the UIImageview I used for the happy face image.
What this piece of code does is wrong, because the transition starts in the center of the screen and not the bottom. Notice that the origin of both frame and bounds are at 0,0...
I have read numerous pages about frames and bounds, but I don't get it. Any help is appreciated!
The loadimages is called only once.
- (void)loadImages {
sadface = [UIImage imageNamed:#"face-sad.jpg"];
happyface = [UIImage imageNamed:#"face-happy.jpg"];
UIImageView *face1view = [[UIImageView alloc]init];
face1view.image = sadface;
[self.view addSubview:face1view];
CGRect frame;
CGRect contentRect = self.view.frame;
frame = CGRectMake(0, 0, contentRect.size.width, contentRect.size.height);
face1view.frame = frame;
face2view = [[UIImageView alloc]init];
face2view.layer.masksToBounds = YES;
face2view.contentMode = UIViewContentModeScaleAspectFill;
face2view.image = happyface;
[self.view addSubview:face2view];
frame = CGRectMake(startpoint.x, 0, contentRect.size.width, contentRect.size.height);
face2view.frame = frame;
face2view.clipsToBounds = YES;
}
-(void)touchesMoved:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{
CGPoint movepoint = [[touches anyObject] locationInView: self.view];
NSLog(#"movepoint: %f %f", movepoint.x, movepoint.y);
face2view.bounds = CGRectMake(0, 0, 320, 480 - movepoint.y);
}
The UIImages and UIImageViews are properly disposed of in the dealloc function.
Indeed, you seem to be confused about frames and bounds. In fact, they are easy. Always remember that any view has its own coordinate system. The frame, center and transform properties are expressed in superview's coordinates, while the bounds is expressed in the view's own coordinate system. If a view doesn't have a superview (not installed into a view hierarchy yet), it still has a frame. In iOS the frame property is calculated from the view's bounds, center and transform. You may ask what the hell frame and center mean when there's no superview. They are used when you add the view to another view, allowing to position the view before it's actually visible.
The most common example when a view's bounds differ from its frame is when it is not in the upper left corner of its superview: its bounds.origin may be CGPointZero, while its frame.origin is not. Another classic example is UIScrollView, which frequently modifies its bounds.origin to make subviews scroll (in fact, modifying the origin of the coordinate system automatically moves every subview without affecting their frames), while its own frame is constant.
Back to your code. First of all, when you already have images to display in image views, it makes sense to init the views with their images:
UIImageView *face1view = [[UIImageView alloc] initWithImage: sadface];
That helps the image view to immediately size itself properly. It is not recommended to init views with -init because that might skip some important code in their designated initializer, -initWithFrame:.
Since you add face1view to self.view, you should really use its bounds rather than its frame:
face1view.frame = self.view.bounds;
Same goes for the happier face. Then in -touchesMoved:… you should either change face2view's frame to move it inside self.view or (if self.view does not contain any other subviews besides faces) modify self.view's bounds to move both faces inside it together. Instead, you do something weird like vertically stretching the happy face inside face2view. If you want the happy face to slide from the bottom of self.view, you should initially set its frame like this (not visible initially):
face2view.frame = CGRectOffset(face2view.frame, 0, CGRectGetHeight(self.view.bounds));
If you choose to swap faces by changing image views' frames (contrasted with changing self.view's bounds), I guess you might want to change both the views' frame origins, so that the sad face slides up out and the happy face slides up in. Alternatively, if you want the happy face to cover the sad one:
face2view.frame = face1view.frame;
Your problem seems to have something to do with the face2view.bounds in touchesMoved.
You are setting the bounds of this view to the rect, x:0, y:0, width:320, height:480 - y
x = 0 == left on the x axis
y = 0 == top on the y axis
So you are putting this image frame at the upper left corner, and making it fill the whole view. That's not what you want. The image simply becomes centered in this imageView.

Moving a UIImageView on an arc using CGAffine

I understand that CGAffineTransformMakeRotation can rotate an image, and CGAffineTransformMakeTranslation translates an image. I also understand CGAffineTransformConcat can merge two transformations. However, I cannot seem to figure out a way to move an image on an arc using both of these. I understand this is more a mathematical question but does anyone have a reference they can point me to?
Edit:
[bezierPathWithArcCenter:radius:startAngle:endAngle:clockwise:]
did the trick.
Reference: http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/UIKit/Reference/UIBezierPath_class/Reference/Reference.html#//apple_ref/occ/clm/UIBezierPath/bezierPathWithArcCenter:radius:startAngle:endAngle:clockwise:
Use a CAKeyframeAnimation with the path set instead of discreet values.
CAKeyframeAnimation *a = [CAKeyframeAnimation animationWithKeyPath:#"position"];
CGRect circleRect = CGRectMake(0,0,50,50);
a.duration = 2.0;
a.rotationMode = kCAAnimationRotateAuto;
a.path = [UIBezierPath bezierPathWithOvalInRect:circleRect].CGPath;
[imageView.layer addAnimation:a forKey:#"moveCircle"];
Rotate it about the center of the circle corresponding to the arc.
This will involve three steps:
1) Translate so that the center of your arc moves to the origin.
2) Rotate through the appropriate angle.
3) Reverse the translation from step 1.

Position on UIImageView

Me again. I have a simple question. I have an UIImageView like the one shown below.
alt text http://img683.imageshack.us/img683/1999/volumen.png
That UIimageView is supposed to be the knob to control the volume of my iphone project. My question is, how to know the positions of bar on the UIImageView when it is rotated? Because the volume needs to be 0.5 when the little bar on the cercle is vertical.
I got a piece of code which is (in the touchMoved method):
float dx = locationT.x - imgVVolume.center.x;
float dy = locationT.y - imgVVolume.center.y;
CGFloat angleDif = 0.0f;
movedRotationAngle = atan2(dy,dx);
if (beganRotationAngle == 0.0) {
beganRotationAngle = movedRotationAngle;
initialTransform = imgVVolume.transform;
}
else {
angleDif = beganRotationAngle - movedRotationAngle;
CGAffineTransform newTrans = CGAffineTransformRotate(initialTransform, -angleDif);
imgVVolume.transform = newTrans;
}
Help please.
It depends on what input mechanism you want to use to control the rotation.
If the knob is to rotate based on a single finger touch dragging from side to side then you can create a UIPanGestureRecognizer and attach it to the knob UIImageView. The translationInView: method returns a CGPoint which is the amount of X and Y movement from the touch-down point. You can feed that into a formula like the one you post to get an angle of rotation. You'll want to keep track of delta from last position and also check for stop limits (like 0..360) to prevent over-rotation.
OTOH, if you're going to use two finger rotation then you'll want to use a UIRotationGestureRecognizer and look for the rotation value. Just feed that into a CGAffineTransformRotate and set it to the UIImageView transform. That takes care of all of the above for you. Again, you'll want to check for stop limits.