I'm trying to create a transition effect on a UITabBarController
somewhat similar to the Facebook app. I managed to get a "scrolling effect" working on tab switch, but I can't seem to figure out how to cross dissolve (or it doesn't work at least).
Here's my current code:
import UIKit
class ScrollingTabBarControllerDelegate: NSObject, UITabBarControllerDelegate {
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, animationControllerForTransitionFrom fromVC: UIViewController, to toVC: UIViewController) -> UIViewControllerAnimatedTransitioning? {
return ScrollingTransitionAnimator(tabBarController: tabBarController, lastIndex: tabBarController.selectedIndex)
}
}
class ScrollingTransitionAnimator: NSObject, UIViewControllerAnimatedTransitioning {
weak var transitionContext: UIViewControllerContextTransitioning?
var tabBarController: UITabBarController!
var lastIndex = 0
func transitionDuration(using transitionContext: UIViewControllerContextTransitioning?) -> TimeInterval {
return 0.2
}
init(tabBarController: UITabBarController, lastIndex: Int) {
self.tabBarController = tabBarController
self.lastIndex = lastIndex
}
func animateTransition(using transitionContext: UIViewControllerContextTransitioning) {
self.transitionContext = transitionContext
let containerView = transitionContext.containerView
let fromViewController = transitionContext.viewController(forKey: UITransitionContextViewControllerKey.from)
let toViewController = transitionContext.viewController(forKey: UITransitionContextViewControllerKey.to)
containerView.addSubview(toViewController!.view)
var viewWidth = toViewController!.view.bounds.width
if tabBarController.selectedIndex < lastIndex {
viewWidth = -viewWidth
}
toViewController!.view.transform = CGAffineTransform(translationX: viewWidth, y: 0)
UIView.animate(withDuration: self.transitionDuration(using: (self.transitionContext)), delay: 0.0, usingSpringWithDamping: 1.2, initialSpringVelocity: 2.5, options: .transitionCrossDissolve, animations: {
toViewController!.view.transform = CGAffineTransform.identity
fromViewController!.view.transform = CGAffineTransform(translationX: -viewWidth, y: 0)
}, completion: { _ in
self.transitionContext?.completeTransition(!self.transitionContext!.transitionWasCancelled)
fromViewController!.view.transform = CGAffineTransform.identity
})
}
}
Would be great if anyone know how to get this to work, been trying for days now without progress... :/
edit: I got a cross dissolve working by replacing the UIView.animate block with:
UIView.transition(with: containerView, duration: 0.2, options: .transitionCrossDissolve, animations: {
toViewController!.view.transform = CGAffineTransform.identity
fromViewController!.view.transform = CGAffineTransform(translationX: -viewWidth, y: 0)
}, completion: { _ in
self.transitionContext?.completeTransition(!self.transitionContext!.transitionWasCancelled)
fromViewController!.view.transform = CGAffineTransform.identity
})
However, the animation is really laggy and not usable :(
edit 2: For people trying to use these snippets, don't forget to hook up the delegate for the UITabBarController
, otherwise nothing will happen.
edit 3: I've found a Swift library that does exactly what I was looking for: https://github.com/Interactive-Studio/TransitionableTab
There is a simpler way to doing this. Add the following code in the tabbar delegate:
Working on Swift 2, 3 and 4
class MySubclassedTabBarController: UITabBarController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
delegate = self
}
}
extension MySubclassedTabBarController: UITabBarControllerDelegate {
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, shouldSelect viewController: UIViewController) -> Bool {
guard let fromView = selectedViewController?.view, let toView = viewController.view else {
return false // Make sure you want this as false
}
if fromView != toView {
UIView.transition(from: fromView, to: toView, duration: 0.3, options: [.transitionCrossDissolve], completion: nil)
}
return true
}
}
EDIT (4/23/18) Since this answer is getting popular, I updated the code to remove the force unwraps, which is a bad practice, and added the guard statement.
EDIT (7/11/18) @AlbertoGarcía is right. If you tap the tabbar icon twice you get a blank screen. So I added an extra check
If you want to use UIViewControllerAnimatedTransitioning
to do something more custom than UIView.transition
, take a look at this gist.
// MyTabController.swift
import UIKit
class MyTabBarController: UITabBarController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
delegate = self
}
}
extension MyTabBarController: UITabBarControllerDelegate {
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, animationControllerForTransitionFrom fromVC: UIViewController, to toVC: UIViewController) -> UIViewControllerAnimatedTransitioning? {
return MyTransition(viewControllers: tabBarController.viewControllers)
}
}
class MyTransition: NSObject, UIViewControllerAnimatedTransitioning {
let viewControllers: [UIViewController]?
let transitionDuration: Double = 1
init(viewControllers: [UIViewController]?) {
self.viewControllers = viewControllers
}
func transitionDuration(using transitionContext: UIViewControllerContextTransitioning?) -> TimeInterval {
return TimeInterval(transitionDuration)
}
func animateTransition(using transitionContext: UIViewControllerContextTransitioning) {
guard
let fromVC = transitionContext.viewController(forKey: UITransitionContextViewControllerKey.from),
let fromView = fromVC.view,
let fromIndex = getIndex(forViewController: fromVC),
let toVC = transitionContext.viewController(forKey: UITransitionContextViewControllerKey.to),
let toView = toVC.view,
let toIndex = getIndex(forViewController: toVC)
else {
transitionContext.completeTransition(false)
return
}
let frame = transitionContext.initialFrame(for: fromVC)
var fromFrameEnd = frame
var toFrameStart = frame
fromFrameEnd.origin.x = toIndex > fromIndex ? frame.origin.x - frame.width : frame.origin.x + frame.width
toFrameStart.origin.x = toIndex > fromIndex ? frame.origin.x + frame.width : frame.origin.x - frame.width
toView.frame = toFrameStart
DispatchQueue.main.async {
transitionContext.containerView.addSubview(toView)
UIView.animate(withDuration: self.transitionDuration, animations: {
fromView.frame = fromFrameEnd
toView.frame = frame
}, completion: {success in
fromView.removeFromSuperview()
transitionContext.completeTransition(success)
})
}
}
func getIndex(forViewController vc: UIViewController) -> Int? {
guard let vcs = self.viewControllers else { return nil }
for (index, thisVC) in vcs.enumerated() {
if thisVC == vc { return index }
}
return nil
}
}
I was struggling with the tab bar animation both from a user tap and programmatically calling selectedIndex = X
since the accepted solution didn't work for me when setting the selected tab programatically.
In the end I managed to solve it by a UITabBarControllerDelegate
and a custom UIViewControllerAnimatedTransitioning
as follows:
extension MainController: UITabBarControllerDelegate {
public func tabBarController(
_ tabBarController: UITabBarController,
animationControllerForTransitionFrom fromVC: UIViewController,
to toVC: UIViewController) -> UIViewControllerAnimatedTransitioning? {
return FadePushAnimator()
}
}
Where the FadePushAnimator looks like this:
class FadePushAnimator: NSObject, UIViewControllerAnimatedTransitioning {
func transitionDuration(using transitionContext: UIViewControllerContextTransitioning?) -> TimeInterval {
return 0.3
}
func animateTransition(using transitionContext: UIViewControllerContextTransitioning) {
guard
let toViewController = transitionContext.viewController(forKey: .to)
else {
return
}
transitionContext.containerView.addSubview(toViewController.view)
toViewController.view.alpha = 0
let duration = self.transitionDuration(using: transitionContext)
UIView.animate(withDuration: duration, animations: {
toViewController.view.alpha = 1
}, completion: { _ in
transitionContext.completeTransition(!transitionContext.transitionWasCancelled)
})
}
}
This approach supports any sort of custom animation and works both on user tap and setting the selected tab programatically. Tested on Swift 5.
To expand on @gmogames answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/45362914/1993937
I couldn't get this to animate when selecting the tab bar index via code, as calling:
tabBarController.setSeletedIndex(0)
Doesn't seem to go through the same call heirarchy, and it skips the method:
tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, shouldSelect viewController: UIViewController)
entirely, resulting in no animation.
In my code I wanted to have an animation transition for a user tapping a tab bar item in addition to me setting the tab bar item in-code manually under certain circumstances.
Here is my addition to the solution above which adds a different method to set the selected index via code that will animate the transition:
import Foundation
import UIKit
@objc class CustomTabBarController: UITabBarController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
delegate = self
}
@objc func set(selectedIndex index : Int) {
_ = self.tabBarController(self, shouldSelect: self.viewControllers![index])
}
}
@objc extension CustomTabBarController: UITabBarControllerDelegate {
@objc func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, shouldSelect viewController: UIViewController) -> Bool {
guard let fromView = selectedViewController?.view, let toView = viewController.view else {
return false // Make sure you want this as false
}
if fromView != toView {
UIView.transition(from: fromView, to: toView, duration: 0.3, options: [.transitionCrossDissolve], completion: { (true) in
})
self.selectedViewController = viewController
}
return true
}
}
Now just call
tabBarController.setSelectedWithIndex(1)
for an in-code animated transition!
I still think it is unfortunate that to get this done we have to override a method that isn't a setter and manipulate data within it. It doesn't make the tab bar controller as extensible as it should be if this is the method that we need to override to get this done.
So, a few years later and more experienced, after revisiting my own question for the same behaviour, I improved a little bit upon Derek's answer.
I inherited most of his code (as it seems like the best solution).
toCoverView
and fromCoverView
, these are snapshotviews of the other view which will be used to fade in/out at the same time.These changes made it feel just about as close as I could get it to Facebook's implementation and I'm personally quite happy with it.
Here's the adapted answer (most of the credit goes to Derek so be sure to upvote him):
class MyTabBarController: UITabBarController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
delegate = self
}
}
extension MyTabBarController: UITabBarControllerDelegate {
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, animationControllerForTransitionFrom fromVC: UIViewController, to toVC: UIViewController) -> UIViewControllerAnimatedTransitioning? {
return MyTransition(viewControllers: tabBarController.viewControllers)
}
}
class MyTransition: NSObject, UIViewControllerAnimatedTransitioning {
let viewControllers: [UIViewController]?
let transitionDuration: Double = 0.2
init(viewControllers: [UIViewController]?) {
self.viewControllers = viewControllers
}
func transitionDuration(using transitionContext: UIViewControllerContextTransitioning?) -> TimeInterval {
return TimeInterval(transitionDuration)
}
func animateTransition(using transitionContext: UIViewControllerContextTransitioning) {
guard
let fromVC = transitionContext.viewController(forKey: UITransitionContextViewControllerKey.from),
let fromView = fromVC.view,
let fromIndex = getIndex(forViewController: fromVC),
let toVC = transitionContext.viewController(forKey: UITransitionContextViewControllerKey.to),
let toView = toVC.view,
let toIndex = getIndex(forViewController: toVC)
else {
transitionContext.completeTransition(false)
return
}
let frame = transitionContext.initialFrame(for: fromVC)
var fromFrameEnd = frame
var toFrameStart = frame
let quarterFrame = frame.width * 0.25
fromFrameEnd.origin.x = toIndex > fromIndex ? frame.origin.x - quarterFrame : frame.origin.x + quarterFrame
toFrameStart.origin.x = toIndex > fromIndex ? frame.origin.x + quarterFrame : frame.origin.x - quarterFrame
toView.frame = toFrameStart
let toCoverView = fromView.snapshotView(afterScreenUpdates: false)
if let toCoverView = toCoverView {
toView.addSubview(toCoverView)
}
let fromCoverView = toView.snapshotView(afterScreenUpdates: false)
if let fromCoverView = fromCoverView {
fromView.addSubview(fromCoverView)
}
DispatchQueue.main.async {
transitionContext.containerView.addSubview(toView)
UIView.animate(withDuration: self.transitionDuration, delay: 0, usingSpringWithDamping: 0.9, initialSpringVelocity: 0.8, options: [.curveEaseOut], animations: {
fromView.frame = fromFrameEnd
toView.frame = frame
toCoverView?.alpha = 0
fromCoverView?.alpha = 1
}) { (success) in
fromCoverView?.removeFromSuperview()
toCoverView?.removeFromSuperview()
fromView.removeFromSuperview()
transitionContext.completeTransition(success)
}
}
}
func getIndex(forViewController vc: UIViewController) -> Int? {
guard let vcs = self.viewControllers else { return nil }
for (index, thisVC) in vcs.enumerated() {
if thisVC == vc { return index }
}
return nil
}
}
The only thing I've yet to figure out is how to make it "interruptible" like Facebook does. I know there's a interruptibleAnimator
function for this but I haven't been able to make it work yet.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With