A customizable animated gradient loading bar. Inspired by iOS 7 Progress Bar from Codepen.
To run the example project, clone the repo, and open the workspace from the Example directory.
CocoaPods is a dependency manager for Cocoa projects. For usage and installation instructions, visit their website. To integrate GradientLoadingBar into your Xcode project using CocoaPods, specify it in your Podfile
:
pod 'GradientLoadingBar', '~> 2.0'
Carthage is a decentralized dependency manager that builds your dependencies and provides you with binary frameworks. To integrate GradientLoadingBar into your Xcode project using Carthage, specify it in your Cartfile
:
github "fxm90/GradientLoadingBar" ~> 2.0
Run carthage update to build the framework and drag the built GradientLoadingBar.framework
, as well as the dependency LightweightObservable.framework
, into your Xcode project.
This framework provides two classes:
- GradientLoadingBar: A controller, managing the visibility of the
GradientActivityIndicatorView
on the current key window. - GradientActivityIndicatorView: A
UIView
containing the gradient with the animation. It can be added as a subview to another view either inside the interface builder or programmatically. Both ways are shown inside the example application.
To get started, import the module GradientLoadingBar
into your file and save an instance of GradientLoadingBar()
on a property of your view-controller. To show the loading bar, simply call the fadeIn(duration:completion)
method and after your async operations have finished call the fadeOut(duration:completion)
method.
class UserViewController: UIViewController {
private let gradientLoadingBar = GradientLoadingBar()
// ...
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
gradientLoadingBar.fadeIn()
userService.loadUserData { [weak self] _ in
// ...
// Be sure to call this on the main thread!!
self?.gradientLoadingBar.fadeOut()
}
}
}
You can overwrite the default configuration by calling the initializers with the optional parameters height
and isRelativeToSafeArea
:
let gradientLoadingBar = GradientLoadingBar(
height: 4.0,
isRelativeToSafeArea: true
)
By setting this parameter you can set the height for the loading bar (defaults to 3.0
)
With this parameter you can configure, whether the loading bar should be positioned relative to the safe area (defaults to true
).
Example with isRelativeToSafeArea
set to true
Example with isRelativeToSafeArea
set to false
This property adjusts the gradient colors shown on the loading bar.
This property adjusts the duration of the animation moving the gradient from left to right.
This method fades-in the loading bar. You can adjust the duration with coresponding parameter. Furthermore you can pass in a completion handler that gets called once the animation is finished.
This methods fades-out the loading bar. You can adjust the duration with coresponding parameter. Furthermore you can pass in a completion handler that gets called once the animation is finished.
If you need the loading bar on multiple / different parts of your app, you can use the given static shared
variable:
GradientLoadingBar.shared.fadeIn()
// Do e.g. server calls etc.
GradientLoadingBar.shared.fadeOut()
If you wish to customize the shared instance, you can add the following code e.g. to your app delegate didFinishLaunchingWithOptions
method and overwrite the shared
variable:
GradientLoadingBar.shared = GradientLoadingBar(height: 5.0)
In case you don't want to add the loading bar onto the key-window, this framework provides the GradientActivityIndicatorView
, which is a direct subclass of UIView
. You can add the view to another view either inside the interface builder or programmatically.
E.g. View added as a subview to a UINavigationBar
E.g. View added as a subview to a UIButton
Note: The progress-animation starts and stops according to the isHidden
flag. Setting this flag to false
will start the animation, setting this to true
will stop the animation. Often you don't want to directly show / hide the view and instead smoothly fade it in or out. Therefore the view provides the methods fadeIn(duration:completion)
and fadeOut(duration:completion)
. Based on my gist, these methods adjust the alpha
value of the view and update the isHidden
flag accordingly.
This property adjusts the gradient colors shown on the loading bar.
This property adjusts the duration of the animation moving the gradient from left to right.
To see all these screenshots in a real app, please have a look at the example application. For further customization you can also subclass GradientLoadingBar
and overwrite the method setupConstraints()
.
Unfortunatly the Interface Builder support is currently broken for Cocoapods frameworks. If you need Interface Builder support, add the following code to your Podfile and run pod install
again. Afterwards you should be able to use the GradientLoadingBar
inside the Interface Builder :)
post_install do |installer|
installer.pods_project.build_configurations.each do |config|
next unless config.name == 'Debug'
config.build_settings['LD_RUNPATH_SEARCH_PATHS'] = [
'$(FRAMEWORK_SEARCH_PATHS)'
]
end
end
Source: Cocoapods – Issue 7606
Felix Mau (me(@)felix.hamburg)
GradientLoadingBar is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.