#BAFluidView
This view and its layer create a 2D fluid animation that can be used to simulate a filling effect.
- Works on any iOS device
To run the example project, clone the repo, and run pod install
from the Example directory first.
BAFluidView is available through CocoaPods. To install it, simply add the following line to your Podfile:
pod "BAFluidView"
To add a BAFluidView
to your app, add the line:
BAFluidView *view = [[BAFluidView alloc] initWithFrame:self.view.frame];
[view fillTo:@1.0];
view.fillColor = [UIColor colorWithHex:0x397ebe];
[view startAnimation];
[parentView addSubview:view];
This creates the following view:
Listed below are examples of several properties that you can control.
You can use initWithFrame:maxAmplitude:minAmplitude:amplitudeIncrement:
to control how high/low you want the wave to go. The increment method helps control the variation between the peaks. If you're only concerned is where the fluid starts, initWithFrame:(CGRect)aRect startElevation:(NSNumber*)aStartElevation
creates a fluid view with default values, but lets you choose the starting elevation. To control all init values, use the method (id)initWithFrame:(CGRect)aRect maxAmplitude:(int)aMaxAmplitude minAmplitude:(int)aMinAmplitude amplitudeIncrement:(int)aAmplitudeIncrement startElevation:(NSNumber*)aStartElevation
which is a combination of the two above.
If you only want the effect to fill only once (or any specific amount of times) you can edit the fillRepeatCount
property:
BAFluidView *view = [[BAFluidView alloc] initWithFrame:self.view.frame maxAmplitude:40 minAmplitude:5 amplitudeIncrement:5];
view.fillRepeatCount = 1;
[view fillTo:@1.0];
view.fillColor = [UIColor colorWithHex:0x397ebe];
[view startAnimation];
[parentView addSubview:view];
You can also create the same effect as above, but stay in the filled state by editing the fillAutoReverse
property:
BAFluidView *view = [[BAFluidView alloc] initWithFrame:self.view.frame maxAmplitude:40 minAmplitude:5 amplitudeIncrement:5];
view.fillColor = [UIColor colorWithHex:0x397ebe];
view.fillAutoReverse = NO;
view.fillRepeatCount = 1;
[view fillTo:@1.0];
[view startAnimation];
[parentView addSubview:view];
This creates the following view:
By default, the animation goes to the top of the view. If you don't want it to go the entire distance, you can use the fillTo:
method by giving it a percentage of the distance you want it to travel:
BAFluidView *view = [[BAFluidView alloc] initWithFrame:self.view.frame];
[view fillTo:@0.5];
view.fillColor = [UIColor colorWithHex:0x397ebe];
[view startAnimation];
[parentView addSubview:view];
This creates the following view:
You can set the duration of a fill with the fillDuration
property. The duration will be the amount of time it takes for the fill to go from 0% - 100%. Adding it to the example above, we get :
BAFluidView *view = [[BAFluidView alloc] initWithFrame:self.view.frame];
view.fillDuration = 5.0;
[view fillTo:@0.5];
view.fillColor = [UIColor colorWithHex:0x397ebe];
[view startAnimation];
[parentView addSubview:view];
Note: fillDuration
needs to be set before you call fillTo:
method!
This creates the following view:
By editing the fillColor
property, you can give the fluid any color:
BAFluidView *fluidView = [[BAFluidView alloc] initWithFrame:self.view.frame startElevation:@0.5];
fluidView.strokeColor = [UIColor whiteColor];
fluidView.fillColor = [UIColor colorWithHex:0x2e353d];
[fluidView keepStationary];
[fluidView startAnimation];
[parentView addSubview:view];
Note: keepStationary
keeps the fluid at the starting level!
This creates the following view:
Similiarly, you can alter the stroke property. With a clear fillColor
you get a wave effect like below:
BAFluidView *fluidView = [[BAFluidView alloc] initWithFrame:self.view.frame startElevation:@0.5];
fluidView.fillColor = [UIColor clearColor];
fluidView.strokeColor = [UIColor whiteColor];
[fluidView keepStationary];
[fluidView startAnimation];
[parentView addSubview:view];
This creates the following view:
If you want to add the effect to another view, use its layer!
BAFluidView *fluidView = [[BAFluidView alloc] initWithFrame:self.view.frame startElevation:@0.3];
fluidView.fillColor = [UIColor colorWithHex:0x397ebe];
[fluidView fillTo:@0.9];
[fluidView startAnimation];
UIImage *maskingImage = [UIImage imageNamed:@"icon"];
CALayer *maskingLayer = [CALayer layer];
maskingLayer.frame = CGRectMake(CGRectGetMidX(fluidView.frame) - maskingImage.size.width/2, 70, maskingImage.size.width, maskingImage.size.height);
[maskingLayer setContents:(id)[maskingImage CGImage]];
[fluidView.layer setMask:maskingLayer];
[parentView addSubview:fluidView];
Sweet! check it out:
The startTiltAnimation
allows the BAFluidView
to listen to a notification that can be broadcasted from a CMMotionManager
instance. Apple recommends only having one CMMotionManager
per application. You'll have to instantiate your own and broadcast the kBAFluidViewCMMotionUpdate
notification with the data object provided (for more information look at example case 4 in the demo). Once set up, you can add tilt animation in the following manner:
BAFluidView *fluidView = [[BAFluidView alloc] initWithFrame:self.view.frame startElevation:@0.5];
[fluidView keepStationary]; //optional
[fluidView startAnimation];
[fluidView startTiltAnimation];
[parentView addSubview:fluidView];
This produces the following animation:
- added tilt functionality
- Code clean up
- fixed
fillTo
and shrinking/growing error
- (BUG FIX) Fixed memory leak for
getBezierPaths
- (BUG FIX) Fixed rotation bug
- Added speed option for fill
- Added Carthage support
- Expose
minAmplitude
,maxAmplitude
, andamplitudeIncrement
- (BUG FIX) Fix background glitch [Issue 14]
- Improved README syntax
- Updated demo [Issue 15]
colorWithHex
now a category ofUIColor
- Added missing headers
- Added new init methods, elevation feature, and updated fillTo
- updated timer function for swipe label
- added ability to change line width
- updated demo (example 1 and 6)
- Updated Demo
- Initial release
- N/A
- Demo for the masking example misaligns on device orientation change.
Bryan Antigua, antigua.B@gmail.com - bryanantigua.com
BAFluidView is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.