Reputation: 600
I am trying to make an effect similar to that found in the new Yahoo weather app. Basically, each page in the UIPageViewController
has a background image, and when scrolling through the page view, the Image's location only scrolls about half the speed. How would I do that? I thought I could use some sort of Delegate Method in the UIPageViewController
to get the current offset and then update the images like that. The only problem is that I cannot find anyway to tell if the UIPageViewController
is being scrolled! Is there a method for that? Thanks!
Upvotes: 31
Views: 31240
Reputation: 9206
You are not supposed to change the delegate of the page view controller's scroll view: it can break its normal behaviour and/or not be supported later on.
Instead, you can:
Add a pan gesture to the page view controller's view:
let panGesture = UIPanGestureRecognizer(target: self, action: #selector(panRecognized(gesture:)))
view.addGestureRecognizer(panGesture)
panGesture.delegate = self
Add the new function in order to know how the view is being scrolled.
@objc func panRecognized(gesture: UIPanGestureRecognizer) {
// Do whatever you need with the gesture.translation(in: view)
}
Declare your ViewController as UIGestureRecognizerDelegate
.
Implement this function:
func gestureRecognizer(_ gestureRecognizer: UIGestureRecognizer, shouldRecognizeSimultaneouslyWith otherGestureRecognizer: UIGestureRecognizer) -> Bool {
return true
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1830
extension UIPageViewController {
var scrollView: UIScrollView? {
return view.subviews.filter { $0 is UIScrollView }.first as? UIScrollView
}
}
Using:
pageController.scrollView?.delegate = self
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 5418
In Swift 3 you could write it even shorter:
if let scrollView = self.pageViewController.view.subviews.first(where: { $0 is UIScrollView }) as? UIScrollView {
scrollView.delegate = self
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 757
Use @Paul's snippet -
for (UIView *v in self.pageViewController.view.subviews) {
if ([v isKindOfClass:[UIScrollView class]]) {
((UIScrollView *)v).delegate = self;
}
}
to implement this protocol : -(void)scrollViewDidScroll:(UIScrollView *)scrollView
-(void)scrollViewDidScroll:(UIScrollView *)scrollView
{
CGPoint point = scrollView.contentOffset;
float percentComplete;
percentComplete = fabs(point.x - self.view.frame.size.width)/self.view.frame.size.width;
NSLog(@"percentComplete: %f", percentComplete);
}
This gives you the percentage completion of the scroll. Happy coding!
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 5605
for (UIView *view in self.pageViewController.view.subviews) {
if ([view isKindOfClass:[UIScrollView class]]) {
[(UIScrollView *)view setDelegate:self];
}
}
this gives you access to all standard scroll view API methods. And this is not using private Apple API's.
I added traversing through subviews, to 100% find the UIPageViewController
's inner scroll view
WARNING:
Be careful with scrollview.contentOffset. It resets as the controller scrolls to new pages
If you need persision scrollview
offset tracking and stuff like that, it would be better to use a UICollectionViewController
with cells sized as the collection view itself and paging enabled.
Upvotes: 51
Reputation: 6892
I would do this:
Objective-C
for (UIView *v in self.pageViewController.view.subviews) {
if ([v isKindOfClass:[UIScrollView class]]) {
((UIScrollView *)v).delegate = self;
}
}
and implement this protocol
- (void)scrollViewDidScroll:(UIScrollView *)scrollView
Swift
for view in self.pageViewController.view.subviews {
if let scrollView = view as? UIScrollView {
scrollView.delegate = self
}
}
and implement this protocol
func scrollViewDidScroll(scrollView: UIScrollView)
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 4401
What you are looking for is called parallax scrolling, you can find several libraries that can help you with that.
Edit: Matt is right this is not an answer, only a hint. Anyway let's complete it:
For animating a background image that lay behind your UIPageViewController you should use the delegate methods that it offer:
-[id<UIPageViewControllerDelegate> pageViewController:willTransitionToViewControllers:]
-[id<UIPageViewControllerDelegate> pageViewController:didFinishAnimating:previousViewControllers:transitionCompleted:]
With these two methods you can calculate the percentage of the scrolling (you should store your controllers in your array to know at which controller you scrolled to and get the percentage)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 535890
My guess is that it is not a UIPageViewController, but rather a paged UIScrollView. The UIScrollView does give you a constantly repeated delegate method that tracks what is happening as the scrolling takes place.
Alternatively, you might be able to access the paged UIScrollView that the UIPageViewController is secretly using, but you might break something, and I'm not sure how Apple would feel about it.
Upvotes: 3