Reputation: 4497
I have a CABasicAnimation
that animating a property of a CALayer
e.g. bounds.origin
. I want to be able to observe the property changing over time, but haven't really found a method that works 100%.
I tried using KVO (key-value observation) on the presentationLayer
's bounds.origin
keypath. The system complains that the object is freed before its observers are freed, leading me to think that the presentation layer is only temporary. Observing presentationLayer.bounds.origin
as a keypath doesn't work.
I tried creating a property on another layer and animating that e.g. by declaring the @property
and making it @dynamic
on that layer. However this new property only gets changed when the presentation layer is accessed (e.g. at the end of the animation), it doesn't seem to update while the animation is running.
I used needsDisplayForKey
on the property in #2, which does trigger updates during the animation, but for these issues:
CALayer
has non-zero frame. Since this layer might be a CAShapeLayer or subclass, it may have a zero frame.setNeedsDisplay
for that layer, but since I'm not actually drawing that layer only monitoring the property change, I don't want to cause it to redraw.I tried scheduling an NSTimer
, and within the timer callback sample the presentationLayer
. This also works but for these issues:
Any suggestions? All this would be on iPhoneOS 3.0/3.1.
Upvotes: 29
Views: 5648
Reputation: 1
The best solution for me is using both: CABasicAnimation and CADisplayLink together. You can start observing changes on start animation and finish on it's finish. You also can calculate each step, but pay attention of timing logic. It will be working when you use linear timing. Or you have to prepare similar logic on your class based on CADisplayLink (transformation aligns to time changes).
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2455
Try using CADisplayLink, which is designed to stay in sync with the animation loop. More info: https://ashfurrow.com/blog/animating-views-with-cadisplaylink/
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 24486
I think you've named all of the possibilities. In fact, I wasn't even aware of #2 and #3 and I wrote the book on Core Animation. ;-)
KVO is not available for these properties. Would be nice if it were, but I believe the reason for this has to do with the overhead it would take. The value would update very frequently and have to call back to any observers.
Anyhow, I've found the NSTimer to be the most reliable approach, but now I'm not sure from what you've said. What makes you think that the timer is out of sync? Why is it difficult get the timer only to fire when the animation is running? Can't you just check for the condition you want in the timer callback and then do nothing if the condition is not met?
Best Regards.
Upvotes: 5