I am using the following codes to switch controller in my Three20 App
TTURLAction * urlAction = [TTURLAction actionWithURLPath:url];
[urlAction applyAnimated:YES];
CATransition * transition = [CATransition animation];
transition.duration = 0.4f;
transition.timingFunction = [CAMediaTimingFunction functionWithName:kCAMediaTimingFunctionEaseInEaseOut];
transition.type = kCATransitionReveal;
transition.subtype = kCATransitionFromRight;
[self.navigationController.view.layer addAnimation:transition forKey:nil];
[[TTNavigator navigator] openURLAction:urlAction];
But the transition is strange and never as smooth as the default Three20 transition, e.g. Move from TTTableViewController to TTViewController
Any one can provide a better codes for a smoother transition?
Is it possible to transit only the content between NavigationController and TabBar? (I mean keep the button in existing NavigationController un-touched)
Thanks.
You are in fact animating twice. First you tell three20 to apply animation by [urlAction applyAnimated:YES]; and then you are attaching your own animation.
Remove applyAnimated: and it works just fine. Tested with Three20 1.0.11 on iOS5 Simulator and device.
It might be clever to use [TTNavigator navigator].topController instead of self.navigationController to get the controller which will present the url. This might be an different one under some circumstances.
Related
Now I need to add cameraIris' Shutter Open effect when switch from one view to another view.
I used for navigation transactions as follows, using http://iphonedevwiki.net/index.php/CATransition
CATransition *transition = [CATransition animation];
transition.duration = 0.8;
transition.timingFunction = [CAMediaTimingFunction functionWithName:kCAMediaTimingFunctionEaseIn];
//cameraIris Effect
[transition setType:#"cameraIris"];
transition.delegate = self;
[self.navigationController.view.layer addAnimation:transition forKey:nil];
[self.navigationController pushViewController:NextView animated:YES];
But now it was closes from out side to middle i need to open this effect from middle to out side / insted of close
can any one please help me
thanks in advance
There are two separate transition effect cameraIrisHollowClose and cameraIrisHollowOpen in addition to cameraIris, so you could have two separate animations, one for opening and one for closing, triggered whenever you need them.
The code below works fine in iOS 4 and 5 but crashes in iOS 6 with EXC_BAD_ACCESS. I'd appreciate any help in troubleshooting it. This code is being called in a UITableViewController that handles my app's search logic:
CATransition *transition = [CATransition animation];
transition.duration = 0.3f;
transition.timingFunction = [CAMediaTimingFunction functionWithName:kCAMediaTimingFunctionLinear];
transition.type = kCATransitionFade;
[self.navigationController.view.layer addAnimation:transition forKey:nil];
[self.navigationController popViewControllerAnimated:NO];
The way I add the tableView is similar and doesn't crash when called:
SearchTVC *searchTable = [[SearchTVC alloc] init];
searchTable.detailViewController = self.detailViewController;
CATransition *transition = [CATransition animation];
transition.duration = 0.3f;
transition.timingFunction = [CAMediaTimingFunction functionWithName:kCAMediaTimingFunctionLinear];
transition.type = kCATransitionFade;
[self.navigationController.view.layer addAnimation:transition forKey:nil];
[self.navigationController pushViewController:searchTable animated:NO];
What could be the problem?
*EDIT
Interestingly the crash doesn't occur if I use [self.navigationController popViewControllerAnimated:YES]; (YES rather than NO). But of course this defeats the purpose of using a custom pop animation.
Check whether you have a line like the following somewhere in your view controller code:
self.navigationController.delegate=self;
If so, then you must set it back
self.navigationController.delegate=nil;
before you say
[self.navigationController popViewControllerAnimated:YES];
Otherwise, popViewControllerAnimated will first deallocate the delegate and then try to call it - resulting in a crash.
I know my question was vague, but I didn't have much else to go off of. I knew the line [self.navigationController popViewControllerAnimated:NO]; was the problem but I couldn't figure out why. Then I came across this question and the first answer suggested I make my search table an instance variable rather than creating a new one every time I want to present it, and that actually worked. It must be a memory issue that I can't wrap my head around.
tl;dr :
Make sure the UIViewController that's being pushed and popped is an instance variable.
Though super late to party... Hope this might help someone in future.
I opened a very old code...
Enabling ARC mode and then resolving all the compiler warnings/error fixed it automatically.
I have a Tab Bar app with a navigation controller on one tab.
I want to push a new view controller, but have it animate in from the left.
What I have is this:
CATransition *transition = [CATransition animation];
transition.duration = 0.8;
transition.timingFunction = [CAMediaTimingFunction functionWithName:kCAMediaTimingFunctionEaseInEaseOut];
transition.type = kCATransitionPush;
transition.subtype = kCATransitionFromLeft;
transition.delegate = self;
controller.hidesBottomBarWhenPushed = YES;
[self.navigationController.view.layer addAnimation:transition forKey:nil];
[self.navigationController pushViewController:controller animated:YES];
Everything pushes in from the left, except for the tab bar, which always slides out to the left (and transition.duration has no effect on that either).
Is there a way to get the taBar to slide out in the same direction & speed with the rest of the view?
(I've also tried using pushModalViewController, but that has various graphical glitches instead).
It seems to me that you are trying to animate only self.navigationController in your code; since the UITabBar is outside of it, it seems reasonable that it does not get animated as you like (I think it gets animated only as an after effect of animating the inner view, but you have no control on it).
What I would try to do is accessing your UITabBarController's view and add an animation to its CALayer as well (or exclusively to that, you can try different possibilities).
I am using the following code to popping to a parent view controller (not always the direct parent in the stack), but for some reason I get the current view controller slide in over itself before the parent I am popping to.
CATransition* transition = [CATransition animation];
transition.type = kCATransitionPush;
transition.subtype = kCATransitionFromLeft;
[self.navigationController.view.layer addAnimation:transition forKey:kCATransition];
[self.navigationController popToViewController:vc animated:YES];
hasPopped = YES;
This appears to be down to the animation code Im using. The only reason I am setting this is because when the app is rotated to landscape the views come in from the bottom on the side. As raised in this question: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4102345/why-do-views-slide-out-at-the-bottom-when-landscape
I solved this by turning the animated:off during the pop as the assigned animation was providing it
I am facing problems in flipping views in iPhone.
I have two views in appDelegate. I want to flip them once user clicks on a button.
I have the following code:
CATransition *transition = [CATransition animation];
transition.duration = 0.75;
[transition #"twist"];
[transition setSubtype:#"fromRight"];
transition.timingFunction = [CAMediaTimingFunction functionWithName:kCAMediaTimingFunctionEaseInEaseOut];
[transition setFillMode:#"extended"];
[[window layer] addAnimation:transition forKey:nil];
[window addSubview:self.s.view];
[CATransaction commit];
But this is not working. Do anybody knows a better way to flip the views on window side.
What I am doing is calling the method from appDelegate in the respective viewControllers to flip the views.
If you're using the 3.0 SDK and all you want is a simple flip transition (ala the Weather app) then you don't need to go down to CATransition. The higher-level UIView animation transitions will do what you want but with 3.0 there is an even easier way: simply present your new view as a modal view controller and set the modal transition style to flip. From within the first controller:
UIViewController *controllerForSecondView = ..;
controllerForSecondView.modalTransitionStyle = UIModalTransitionStyleFlipHorizontal;
[self presentModalViewController:controllerForSecondView animated:YES];
Flip back again by using dismissModalViewController.
Documentation Reference
#Luke - thanks, this sample helped me...1 correction though (based on UIViewController.h)
UIViewController *controllerForSecondView = ..;
controllerForSecondView.modalTransitionStyle = UIModalTransitionStyleFlipHorizontal;
[self presentModalViewController:controllerForSecondView animated:YES];
From the header file comments:
// Defines the transition style that will be used for this view controller when it is presented modally. Set this property on the view controller to be presented, not the presenter.
// Defaults to UIModalTransitionStyleSlideVertical.
#property(nonatomic,assign) UIModalTransitionStyle modalTransitionStyle
See The Elements sample code. Particularly AtomicElementViewController -flipCurrentView.