How to add a moving text in iPhone - iphone

I want to add some text which is a long text lets say a story and I want it to be presented in a moving up fashion. That is it will be displayed in a box and the text will be moved line by line to show the whole story. So one line gets out of the box from top and other comes from the bottom. Like a HTML marquee behavior.

You should look into whether or not UIScrollView's contentOffset property is animatable using UIView animation blocks.
If it's not, then you could try using an NSTimer and in its function, either set the contentOffset or call [scrollView scrollRectToVisible:desiredContentFrame animated:YES]; where desiredContentFrame.origin.y is just a little bit lower than what you previously had it at (depending on the scroll speed you want). Then play around with the firing frequency of your timer and the desiredContentFrame.origin.y's delta to see what looks best and has the best performance.
Here's a quick hack showing both ways:
- (void)startAnimTimer
{
currentRect = CGRectMake(0, 0, 1, 1);
[NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:0.05 target:self selector:#selector(doScroll) userInfo:nil repeats:YES];
}
- (void)startAnimUIView
{
[UIView beginAnimations:#"scrollUIViewAnim" context:nil];
[UIView setAnimationDuration:20.0];
[UIView setAnimationCurve:UIViewAnimationCurveLinear];
CGPoint newContentOffset = CGPointMake(0, scrollView.contentSize.height);
scrollView.contentOffset = newContentOffset;
[UIView commitAnimations];
}
- (void)loadView {
[super loadView];
self.scrollView = [[UIScrollView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(5, 5, 200, 200)];
scrollView.contentSize = CGSizeMake(200, 1000);
scrollView.backgroundColor = [UIColor magentaColor];
CGFloat y = 10;
CGFloat yDelta = 21;
for(int i = 0; i < 47; i++)
{
// Add some UILabels to the scrollview just so we can see it animating
UILabel *label = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(10, y, 180, 20)];
label.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"Cheezburger %d", i];
[scrollView addSubview:label];
[label release];
y += yDelta;
}
[self.view addSubview:scrollView];
// Comment out one of these
//[self startAnimTimer];
[self startAnimUIView];
}
- (void)doScroll
{
CGFloat scrollDelta = 1.0f;
CGRect newRect = CGRectMake(0, currentRect.origin.y + scrollDelta, currentRect.size.width, currentRect.size.height);
// Scroll the scrollview to the next position
[scrollView scrollRectToVisible:newRect animated:YES];
currentRect = newRect;
}

This method may help (or not):
- (void)scrollRectToVisible:(CGRect)rect animated:(BOOL)animated
If not, just make a big UILabel and animate its frame using a CABasicAnimation.

I think you want to look at the Scroll View (UIScrollView) in the iPhone SDK.
http://developer.apple.com/IPhone/library/documentation/UIKit/Reference/UIScrollView_Class/Reference/UIScrollView.html
Depending on your implementation, you may not be able to use it "out of the box" but it should provide the functionality you seem to be describing. I'm not sure it will do the auto-scroll thing but that should be pretty easy to implement... maybe.... But, I'm still confident it could be done.

Related

iOS - UIScrollView is not working (it doesn't scroll at all - the image stays fixed)

I would like to display an image (width: 320 pixels, height: 1250 pixels) in an image view.
When I compile the application I get no scrolling at all. The view stays fixed.
What I did:
Added an UIScrollView via Interface Builder to my view.
Added an UIImageView via Interface Builder to my view.
Verified that UIImageView is below UIScrollView in Interface Builder.
Set the size of the UIScrollView with ViewDidLoad.
How do I do this?
Code:
- (void)viewDidLoad
{
[super viewDidLoad];
scrollView.contentSize = CGSizeMake(320, 1250);
}
Screenshots:
ImageView:
ScrollView:
I just have done the same task..
Try this one.....
scrollView.delegate = self;
scrollView.scrollEnabled = YES;
int scrollWidth = 120;
scrollView.contentSize = CGSizeMake(scrollWidth,80);
int xOffset = 0;
imageView.image = [UIImage imageNamed:[imagesName objectAtIndex:0]];
for(int index=0; index < [imagesName count]; index++)
{
UIImageView *img = [[UIImageView alloc] init];
img.bounds = CGRectMake(10, 10, 50, 50);
img.frame = CGRectMake(5+xOffset, 0, 50, 50);
NSLog(#"image: %#",[imagesName objectAtIndex:index]);
img.image = [UIImage imageNamed:[imagesName objectAtIndex:index]];
[images insertObject:img atIndex:index];
scrollView.contentSize = CGSizeMake(scrollWidth+xOffset,110);
[scrollView addSubview:[images objectAtIndex:index]];
xOffset += 70;
}
Also set this one....
imagesName = [[NSArray alloc]initWithObjects:#"image1.jpg",#"image2.jpg",#"image3.jpg",#"image4.jpg",#"image5.jpg",#"image6.png",#"image7.png",#"image9.png",nil];
images = [[NSMutableArray alloc]init];
So for me the problem was that setting the content size didn't work in viewDidLoad(). I tried everything and I didn't understand why it wouldn't want to work, and then I tried the same stuff in viewDidAppear() and it magically worked...
From you last screenshot and from your comments it looks like your scrollView is way to big.
The scrollview must be visible on screen completely. For example a full screen UIScrollView on iPhone would have a size of 320 x 460.
If the scrollview is the same size as its content you can't scroll.
The greenish rectangle shows the size of your scrollview, the pinkish the size of your content (your image):
Xcode 11+, Swift 5
You can find the complete solution here.
I came across this same issue on iOS6 and the solution was to programmatically adjust the ContentSize.
So I will just quote from Raja (above) to show this:
CGSize scrollViewContentSize = CGSizeMake(320, 400);
[self.scrollView setContentSize:scrollViewContentSize];
NOTE: I was not having this issue on iOS5.. seems like iOS6 decided to do alot of prank just like the rotation/orientation saga
Since Xcode 5 it does not work like before. Also scrolling to the end of a scrollable text field makes problems. There are also differences between doing it on iPhone or iPad. On iPhone it worked without delayed timer.
This worked for me:
- (void)viewDidLoad
{
[super viewDidLoad];
NSTimer *timerforScrollView;
timerforScrollView =[NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:0.1
target:self selector:#selector(forScrollView)userInfo:nil repeats:NO];
}
- (void) forScrollView {
[scrollviewPad setScrollEnabled:YES];
[scrollviewPad setContentSize:CGSizeMake(768, 1015)]; // must be greater then the size in Storyboard
}
I found I had a similar problem but none of the above code worked. The issue was due to autolayout. I found that if I turned off autolayout by going to the storyboard clicking on Utilities -> File Inspector and unchecked Use Autolayout the scrolling did work (I also set scroll.contentSize = ...).
Sometimes autoLayout checkbox is ticked in the xib. That also creates this issue in xcode 5. Which makes the UIScrollView scrolling off.
Don't forget to add the category protocol to the interface, like this
#interface MyViewController : <UIScrollViewDelegate>
If you don't, you will not be able to set the scroll view delegate to self
(i.e. [MyScrollView setDelegate:self];)
If you do this, it should work.
My code is:
-(void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated {
[super viewDidAppear:animated];
[contentScrollView setDelegate:self];
[contentScrollView setScrollEnabled:YES];
contentScrollView.contentSize = CGSizeMake(310, 500);
contentScrollView.frame = CGRectMake(5, 188, 310, 193);
}
Did you assign the scroll's view delegate? Always remember these:
[self.scrollView setDelegate:self];
[self.scrollView setScrollEnabled:YES];
The image view has to be a subview (so inside AND below) of the scrollview. From your description it seems they are paralell
You forgot one line. Add this to your view load function:
[scrollView setScrollEnabled:YES];
You could try disabling AutoLayout. In XCode 5 I tested all the above answers and I could only scroll it by disabling autolayout and activating all autosizing masks under the Size Inspector. The following code was used too:
self.scrollView.contentSize = CGSizeMake(320, 900);
self.scrollView.delegate = self;
self.scrollView.scrollEnabled = YES;
self.scrollView.frame = self.view.frame;
CGRect scrollViewFrame = CGRectMake(0, 0, 320, 400);
self.scrollView = [[UIScrollView alloc] initWithFrame:scrollViewFrame];
[self.view addSubview:self.scrollView];
CGSize scrollViewContentSize = CGSizeMake(320, 400);
[self.scrollView setContentSize:scrollViewContentSize];
scrollView.delegate = self;
[self.scrollView setBackgroundColor:[UIColor blackColor]];
[scrollView setCanCancelContentTouches:NO];
scrollView.indicatorStyle = UIScrollViewIndicatorStyleWhite;
scrollView.clipsToBounds = YES;
scrollView.scrollEnabled = YES;
scrollView.pagingEnabled = YES;
NSUInteger nimages = 0;
CGFloat cx = 0;
for (; ; nimages++) {
NSString *imageName = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"image%d.jpg", (nimages + 1)];
UIImage *image = [UIImage imageNamed:imageName];
if (image == nil) {
break;
}
UIImageView *imageView = [[UIImageView alloc] initWithImage:image];
CGRect rect = imageView.frame;
rect.size.height = image.size.height;
rect.size.width = image.size.width;
rect.origin.x = ((scrollView.frame.size.width - image.size.width) / 2) + cx;
rect.origin.y = ((scrollView.frame.size.height - image.size.height) / 2);
imageView.frame = rect;
[scrollView addSubview:imageView];
[imageView release];
cx += scrollView.frame.size.width;
}
[scrollView setContentSize:CGSizeMake(cx, [scrollView bounds].size.height)];
Assuming that scrollView is a subview of view and fills it entirely you can use the following in viewDidLoad:
[scrollView setContentSize: CGSizeMake(self.view.frame.size.width, self.view.frame.size.height)];
I had a UIScrollView that was not scrolling and this allowed it to scroll.
Just add code
scrollView.contentSize = CGSizeMake(WIDTH,HEIGHT);
to method -(void)viewDidLayoutSubviews.
For more information checkout Stanford CS193p Lecture No 8 to understand View Controller Life cycle.
I had the same issue and was looking for the answer in this thread. I tried all the stuff, but nothing works. Then I found this:
.
You just need to deselect "Use Auto Layout" in File Inspector of your ViewController. Ta-Da, it works immediately for me. Enjoy.

Is it possible to add fixed content to a UIScrollView?

I want to create a subclass of UITableView or UIScrollView that will have some shading at the top when the content offset is > 0 to indicate that the content is scrollable. (See image attached)
The way I'm implementing it right now is using the UIViewController that is the delegate of the tableView. I simply have a GradientView on top of the tableView, and I intercept scrollViewDidScroll: to animate the visibility of that top gradient.
My problem with this implementation is that it's not "clean". I want my UIViewControllers to take care of logic, and not to deal with applying gradients and stuff. I wish I could just drop a subclass of UITableView that will do that for me.
The challenge for me is that I can't figure out how the tableView could add to itself a fixed content on top of the scrollable content.
Another question is what method/s of UIScrollView should I override to intercept the scrolling event. Obviously I don't want the tableView to be the delegate of itself...
Any ideas?
Thanks!
Ok, so I found the solution on Apple's WWDC 2011 Session 104 video - Advanced Scroll View Techniques.
There is a whole section in this video about "Stationary Views" inside a scroll view.
According to Apple, the way to go here is to override layoutSubviews and put there all the code to position whatever you want - wherever you want.
I tried it and it's actually pretty easy and it's working as expected.
So for example if I would like a shadowed header on top of the table when the content is being scrolled, this is the code I should write:
-(void) layoutSubviews
{
[super layoutSubviews];
[self positionTopShadow];
}
-(void) positionTopShadow
{
CGFloat yOffset = self.contentOffset.y;
// I'm doing some limiting so that the maximum height of the shadow view will be 40 pixels
yOffset = MIN(yOffset, 40);
yOffset = MAX(0, yOffset);
CGRect frame = self.topShadowView.frame;
// The origin should be exactly like the content offset so it would look like
// the shadow is at the top of the table (when it's actually just part of the content)
frame.origin = CGPointMake(0, self.contentOffset.y);
frame.size.height = yOffset;
frame.size.width = self.frame.size.width;
self.topShadowView.frame = frame;
if (self.topShadowView.superview == nil)
{
[self addSubview:self.topShadowView];
}
[self bringSubviewToFront:self.topShadowView];
}
I've managed to figure out a much simpler way of doing this then what Avraham did.
I use the fact that the UIScrollView calls scrollViewDidScroll: ever pixel the scrolling changes to set the object at the location of the offset. Below is my full code to keep a gray bar at the top of the scrollview as you move around:
- (void)viewDidLoad {
UIScrollView* scrollView = [[UIScrollView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(5.0, 50.0, self.bounds.size.width - 15.0, self.bounds.size.height - 60.0)];
[scrollView setBackgroundColor:[UIColor colorWithRed:251.0/255.0 green:251.0/255.0 blue:251.0/255.0 alpha:1.0]];
[scrollView setContentSize:CGSizeMake(scrollView.frame.size.width + 500, 1000.0)];
[scrollView setDelegate:self];
[self addSubview:scrollView];
UIView* header = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0.0, 0.0, scrollView.contentSize.width, 40.0)];
[header setTag:100];
[header setBackgroundColor:[UIColor darkGrayColor]];
[scrollView addSubview:header];
}
-(void)scrollViewDidScroll:(UIScrollView *)scrollView {
UIView* header = [self viewWithTag:100];
[header setFrame:CGRectMake(0.0, scrollView.contentOffset.y, header.bounds.size.width, header.bounds.size.height)];
}
You could try using viewForHeaderInSection method of tableView for the shaded view(and also heightForHeaderInSection)... Make the shaded portion as a header.That way there is a fixed content on top of the scrollable content.
#define kImageOriginHight 300
- (void)scrollViewDidScroll:(UIScrollView *)scrollView1{
CGFloat yOffset = scrollView1.contentOffset.y;
// NSLog(#" y offset := %f", yOffset);
//zoom images and hide upper view while scrooling to down position
if (yOffset < 0) {//-kImageOriginHight
CGRect f = imgV.frame;
f.origin.y = yOffset;
f.size.height = -yOffset + kImageOriginHight;
imgV.frame = f;
//viewTableUpperView.alpha = 1.5 - (yOffset/-kImageOriginHight);
//viewTableUpperView.userInteractionEnabled = NO;
if(yOffset+0.5 == -kImageOriginHight){
[UIView animateWithDuration:0.1 animations:^{
//viewTableUpperView.alpha = 1.0;
}];
//viewTableUpperView.userInteractionEnabled = YES;
}
}
}

Animation on UIButton Click in iPhone

Everybody..
How to set animation on button click ?
I have two buttons, both have different frame..
First CGRectMake (10 , 10 , 100 , 80 ); It has Black Image,
Second CGRectMake (200, 10 , 210 , 80 ); It has White Image,
When I click on First button of those, It should be animate to move from one frame to another frame..
Only seen like first's button Black Image move to second button location.. Like Image changes of Buttons..
After clicked button frame does not change... Should be remain as First and Second..
I have tried but not got the exact
buttonFirst.frame = buttonSecond.frame;
buttonFirst.center = buttonSecond.center;
buttonFirst.transform = CGAffineTransformMakeTranslation( buttonSecond.frame.origin.x - buttonFirst.frame.origin.x , buttonSecond.frame.origin.y - buttonFirst.frame.origin.y);
How to animate this ?
Editting :
I need to move one checkers from one CGRect to Another CGRect.. So, It want to display like moving checkers, But i dont want to change CGRect, Only button images looks like that...
Please tell me..
Thanks...
very simple logic
[UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
[UIView setAnimationDuration:0.20f];
[UIView setAnimationCurve:UIViewAnimationCurveLinear];
[UIView setAnimationBeginsFromCurrentState:YES];
[firstButton setFrame:CGRectMake(5, 50, 30, 30)];//moves to second button place
[secondButton setFrame:CGRectMake(5, 5, 30, 30)];//moves to first button place
[UIView commitAnimations];
use the logic accordingly to your use..
well..
you can try this link
[UIView beginAnimation/endAnimation] bock
CGRect oldRectFirst = buttonFirst.frame;
CGRect oldRectSecond = buttonSecond.frame;
[UIView animateWithDuration:0.2f animations:^{
buttonFirst.frame = oldRectSecond;
buttonSecond.frame = oldRectFirst;
}];
Here is example from working program:
[self.buttonFirst setUserInteractionEnabled:NO];
[UIView transitionWithView:self.buttonFirst
duration:1.0
options:UIViewAnimationOptionTransitionFlipFromLeft | UIViewAnimationOptionCurveLinear
animations:^{
buttonFirst.frame = buttonSecond.frame;
buttonFirst.center = buttonSecond.center;
}
completion:^(BOOL finished){
[self.buttonFirst setUserInteractionEnabled:YES];
}];
Finally i got the answer...
I have set two button in two separate view. after set one timer, and move first button image to another button's position..
Here is a sample code for that..
Step 1 : Set view with Timer
UIView *oldView = [[UIView alloc] init];
oldView = [viewArray objectAtIndex:selectedIndex];
UIView *newView = [[UIView alloc] init];
newView = [viewArray objectAtIndex:[sender tag]];
oldRect = [oldView frame];
newRect = [newView frame];
movingTimer = [[NSTimer alloc] init];
movingTimer = [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:0.1 target:self selector:#selector(movingCheckers:) userInfo:nil repeats:YES];
imageViewMove = [[UIImageView alloc] init];
[imageViewMove setFrame:oldRect];
[imageViewMove setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:blackManName]];
[self.view bringSubviewToFront:imageViewMove];
[self.view addSubview:imageViewMove];
Step 2 : Moving Image to second position
CGPoint aPoint = CGPointMake(newRect.origin.x - oldRect.origin.x, oldRect.origin.y - newRect.origin.y);
imageViewMove.frame = CGRectMake(imageViewMove.frame.origin.x + (aPoint.x / 6) , imageViewMove.frame.origin.y - (aPoint.y / 6), imageViewMove.frame.size.width, imageViewMove.frame.size.height);
if (imageViewMove.frame.origin.x >= newRect.origin.x)
{
[selectButton setBackgroundImage:nil forState:UIControlStateNormal];
[moveButton setBackgroundImage:imageViewMove.image forState:UIControlStateNormal];
[imageViewMove removeFromSuperview];
[movingTimer invalidate];
}
Now its work.....

Accessing the current position of UIView during animation

I am trying to find the current position of an iPhone ImageView that is animating across the screen.
I create and animate the imageView like so
-(IBAction)button:(UIButton *)sender{
UIImageView *myImageView =[[UIImageView alloc] initWithImage:
[UIImage imageNamed:#"ball.png"]];
myImageView.frame = CGRectMake(0, self.view.frame.size.height/2, 40, 40);
[self.view addSubview:myImageView];
[myArray addObject:myImageView];
[UIView animateWithDuration:.5
delay:0
options:(UIViewAnimationOptionAllowUserInteraction) // | something here?)
animations:^{
myImageView.frame = CGRectOffset(myImageView.frame, 500, 0);
}
completion:^(BOOL finished){
[myArray removeObject:myImageView];
[myImageView removeFromSuperview];
[myImageView release];
}
];
}
then to detect the current CGPoint of the imageView I call this method every 60th of a second
-(void)findPoint{
for (UIImageView *projectile in bullets) {
label.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%f", projectile.center.x];
label2.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%f", projectile.center.y];
}
}
However this only gives me the point where the animation ends, I want to get the current CGPoint of the image that is animating across the screen. Is there an option that I need to apply other than UIViewAnimationOptionAllowUserInteraction to do this? If not, how do I get the current position of an animating imageView?
You can use the presentationLayer - a property of the CALayer that "provides a close approximation to the version of the layer that is currently being displayed". Just use it like this:
CGRect projectileFrame = [[projectile.layer presentationLayer] frame];
Swift 5:
Get temporary position and size (CGRect) during the animation with:
let currentFrame = projectileFrame.layer.presentation()!.frame

How can I add a UIDatePicker Subview with working user interaction

I have a view based application which has some textboxes that I'm trying to populate with some pickers. For example, one of them will be for date selection. I'm using the following to add a new view to the bottom of my current view, then scroll the entire view upwards:
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField {
if(textField == [self date]) {
editingDate = YES;
UIDatePicker *pv = [[UIDatePicker alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0,460,0,0)];
pv.userInteractionEnabled = YES;
[self.view addSubview:pv];
textField.placeholder = #"currently selecting below";
[self scrollTheView:YES];
return NO;
}
return YES;
}
My scrollTheView method executes as follows:
- (void)scrollTheView:(BOOL) moveUp {
int scrollAmount = 212;
[UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
[UIView setAnimationDuration:0.3];
CGRect rect = self.view.frame;
if(moveUp){
rect.origin.y -= scrollAmount;
}
else {
rect.origin.y += scrollAmount;
}
self.view.frame = rect;
[UIView commitAnimations];
}
My problem is that although the display looks perfect, the datepicker control will not accept my input at all. It is simply stuck on the current date. I'm not sure what I'm missing here, probably something simple.
By modifying the code above to do the following to add the subview as a subview of the superview:
UIView *myView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 480, 320, 216)];
UIDatePicker *pv = [[UIDatePicker alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0,0,320,216)];
[myView addSubview:pv];
[self.view.superview addSubview:myView];
and modifying my scroll method to additionally scroll this new view:
UIView *sv = self.view.superview;
UIView *subv = [[sv subviews] objectAtIndex:1];
CGRect rect2 = subv.frame;
if(moveUp){
rect2.origin.y -= scrollAmount;
}
else {
rect2.origin.y += scrollAmount;
}
subv.frame = rect2;
I was able to achieve the goal. Thanks to Ben for the assistance.
It sounds from what you've described that you're placing your UIDatePicker inside of another view, but outside of its bounds. If "Clips subviews" in IB is not checked, then you'll still be able to SEE your picker, but since it's not in the bounds area, it will not be touchable.