So I'm using the new UIViewPropertyAnimator and UIVisualEffectView to achieve the same thing as the Spotlight search when you scrolling down on the home screen and it blurs the background.
I'm using the fractionComplete property to set the procent of how much to blur when panning a UIView.
animator = UIViewPropertyAnimator(duration: 1, curve: .linear) {
self.blurEffectView.effect = nil
}
And the amount of blurriness is changed with a value between 0.0 - 1.0.
animator?.fractionComplete = blurValue
But when I cancel the pan gesture I want the blur to animate back from where it is to no blur (e.g ~ -> 1.0) with a duration of something like 0.4 milliseconds.
Right now I just set the fractionComplete to 1.0 when the pan gesture is cancelled. Instead I want to animate it.
I have tried the UIView.animate(withDuration.. but it doesn't affect the UIViewPropertyAnimators fractionComplete, and thats the only way to blur an UIVisualEffectView.
Any ideas?
It seems that fractionComplete
has a bug (my question on Stackoverflow: UIViewPropertyAnimator does not update the view when expected), rdar://30856746. The property only sets the state from inactive
to active
, but does not update the view, because (I assume) there is another internal state that does not trigger.
To workaround the problem you can do this:
animator.startAnimation() // This will change the `state` from inactive to active
animator.pauseAnimation() // This will change `isRunning` back to false, but the `state` will remain as active
// Now any call of `fractionComplete` should update your view correctly!
animator.fractionComplete = /* your value here */
Here is a playground snippet to play around:
let liveView = UIView(frame: CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: 400, height: 50))
liveView.backgroundColor = .white
PlaygroundPage.current.needsIndefiniteExecution = true
PlaygroundPage.current.liveView = liveView
let square = UIView(frame: CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: 50, height: 50))
square.backgroundColor = .red
liveView.addSubview(square)
let animator = UIViewPropertyAnimator.init(duration: 5, curve: .linear)
animator.addAnimations {
square.frame.origin.x = 350
}
let blurView = UIVisualEffectView(effect: UIBlurEffect(style: .dark))
blurView.frame = liveView.bounds
liveView.addSubview(blurView)
animator.addAnimations {
blurView.effect = nil
}
// If you want to restore the blur after it was animated, you have to
// safe a reference to the effect which is manipulated
let effect = blurView.effect
animator.addCompletion {
// In case you want to restore the blur effect
if $0 == .start { blurView.effect = effect }
}
animator.startAnimation()
animator.pauseAnimation()
DispatchQueue.main.asyncAfter(deadline: .now() + 2) {
animator.fractionComplete = 0.5
}
DispatchQueue.main.asyncAfter(deadline: .now() + 4) {
// decide the direction you want your animation to go.
// animator.isReversed = true
animator.startAnimation()
}
If you're still looking for a way to actually animate fractionComplete without the use of a slider or a gesture, I was quite happy with my results using a CADisplayLink. You can see my results here: https://gist.github.com/vegather/07993d15c83ffcd5182c8c27f1aa600b
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