aslı
aslı

Reputation: 8914

Xcode warning: "This will cause the effect to appear broken until opacity returns to 1"

I have a prototype cell and I put a UIVisualEffectView inside its ContentView. Visual Effect View's Blur Style is Dark and Vibrancy is off. Then I set the alpha of the Visual Effect View to 0,5 using the IB.

Then on runtime, I get a warning that says:

<UIVisualEffectView ...> is being asked to animate its opacity. This will cause the effect to appear broken until opacity returns to 1.

I couldn't understand why this warning is there and how I can set this alpha property properly.

Upvotes: 29

Views: 23813

Answers (7)

Phantom59
Phantom59

Reputation: 1119

You never know if the delay is long enough; so a bit of a cleaner solution is to just do the presentation in the next run loop.

 dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^(void){
    [self presentViewController:yourPopoverr animated: YES completion: nil];
  });

Upvotes: 0

vanab
vanab

Reputation: 1

If u presenting viewcontroller modally, try to disable animation checkbox in segue.

Upvotes: 0

zvonicek
zvonicek

Reputation: 1503

The question is what do you want to animate. If it's the effect, you cannot animate it via the alpha property. However, since iOS 9, you can animate it with setting the effect in animation block.

UIVisualEffectView* view = [[UIVisualEffectView alloc] initWithFrame:self.view.bounds];
view.effect = nil;
[UIView animateWithDuration:0.3 animations:^{
    view.effect = [UIBlurEffect effectWithStyle:UIBlurEffectStyleDark];
}];

Alternatively, you can animate the effect by animating the alpha of the wrapper view, as proposed in the other answers (working even on iOS 8).

If you want to animate the content of the visual effect view (the subviews), animate the contentView property instead (which you should use to add subviews of the effect view).

[UIView animateWithDuration:0.3 animations:^{
    view.contentView.alpha = 1.0;
}];

So to sum up, you should never change alpha of the UIVisualEffectView itself as it's most likely not what you want.

Upvotes: 14

Bill Chan
Bill Chan

Reputation: 3473

My solution:

  1. Duplicate the layer behind the visual effect view. (In my case an UIImageView)
  2. Animates the alpha value the the duplicated view. (e.g. alpha form 1 to 0, shows the blurred Image)

Upvotes: 1

Sahil Kapoor
Sahil Kapoor

Reputation: 11803

The desired effect can be achieved by setting alpha of the background color rather than the Visual Effect View. The subviews should be added to View of Visual Effect View and they are not affected by the background blur.

The Vibrancy effect must be selected in View Effect View options above.

See image:

enter image description here

Upvotes: 8

Kemal Can Kaynak
Kemal Can Kaynak

Reputation: 1658

user1179321 definetely right. According to UIVisualEffectView Documentation;

When using the UIVisualEffectView class, avoid alpha values that are less than 1. Creating views that are partially transparent causes the system to combine the view and all the associated subviews during an offscreen render pass. UIVisualEffectView objects need to be combined as part of the content they are layered on top of in order to look correct. Setting the alpha to less than 1 on the visual effect view or any of its superviews causes many effects to look incorrect or not show up at all.

https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/documentation/uikit/reference/UIVisualEffectView/index.html

Upvotes: 5

user1179321
user1179321

Reputation: 801

As far as I can remember you cannot change the alpha of a visual effect view. The alpha always has to be one.

Upvotes: 12

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