UIProgressView track and progress images not working in iOS7 - ios

I have a UIProgressView that has been customised with a progress and track image. I also customised the size of the progress view. This works fine in iOS 6. I am facing problems getting this to work in iOS7.
_progress.progressViewStyle = UIProgressViewStyleBar;
_progress.trackImage = [UIImage imageNamed:#"summary-progress-track.png"];
_progress.progressImage = [UIImage imageNamed:#"summary-progress.png"];
_progress.frame = CGRectMake(50, 50, 100, 10);
Not only is the height being ignored but the custom images do not get applied. I just get a blue tinted progress bar like this:
I think the default tint colour is somehow overriding the progress images. I have also tried setting this with UIAppearance but it did not work.
- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions
{
[[UIProgressView appearance] setProgressImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"summary-progress.png"]];
[[UIProgressView appearance] setTrackImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"summary-progress-track.png"]];
return YES;
}

Personally I use the MPProgressHUD for all progress tracking on a view. Here's the link to the download
https://github.com/jdg/MBProgressHUD
The usage is as simple as it get. Here's a tutorial you might like to check out.
http://code.tutsplus.com/tutorials/ios-sdk-uiactivityindicatorview-and-mbprogresshud--mobile-10530
The MPProgressHUD has a specific method to show custom images.

This should be helpful if you have not already seen this.
https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/documentation/UserExperience/Conceptual/UIKitUICatalog/UIProgressView.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40012857-UIProgressView-SW1
the blue color is the default tint color for the control in iOS7 that gets applied.

Found a solution. If anyone else is stuck on this check out this answer and suggested code to workaround the issue: UIProgressView custom track and progress images in iOS 7.1

I print the progress's subviews and find that one of them's frame width is 0,
so after
[_videoProgressView setProgress:progress animated:NO];
reset the track and progress images
UIImageView *trackImageView = _videoProgressView.subviews.firstObject;
UIImageView *progressImageView = _videoProgressView.subviews.lastObject;
CGRect trackProgressFrame = trackImageView.frame;
trackProgressFrame.size.height = _videoProgressView.frame.size.height;
trackImageView.frame = trackProgressFrame;
progressImageView.frame = trackProgressFrame;
progressImageView.image = progressImage;
trackImageView.image = trackImage;

Related

How to change the background image of tab bar in Objective-C?

I am develop in objective-C. I want to change the tab bar background like the following picture:
And the code is like the following:
UIImage *tabBarBackground = [UIImage imageNamed:#"tabbaritem_background.png"];
[[UITabBar appearance] setBackgroundImage:tabBarBackground];
But after setting the background image , the background is not at the correct place like the following:
The background image should be place at the bottom like the background in above picture.
Did I missing something ? Can someone help me ?
Thanks in advance.
I think is somewhere you go wrong, check if is this steps:
In the storyboard change the ViewController's background color for test.
Embed the ViewController in Tab Bar Controller
In the ViewController.m you can set the tabbar bacground color:
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
// Do any additional setup after loading the view, typically from a nib.
[[UITabBar appearance] setBackgroundColor:[UIColor grayColor]]; // Here you can set the converted color form image, make sure the imageSize fit.
}
The result is below:
I think the method - (UIImage *)resizableImageWithCapInsets:(UIEdgeInsets)capInsets resizingMode:(UIImageResizingMode)resizingMode you can try, because your backgroudimage's size is not equal to tabbar'size.
Try this method to change your image to a ScaleImage.
+(UIImage *)getScaleImageNamed:(NSString *)name{
UIImage *nomalImage = [UIImage imageNamed:name];
CGFloat hInset = floorf(nomalImage.size.width / 2);
CGFloat vInset = floorf(nomalImage.size.height / 2);
UIImage *res = [nomalImage resizableImageWithCapInsets:UIEdgeInsetsMake(vInset, hInset, vInset, hInset)];
return res;
}
Steps you may miss, hope that can help.
Make sure you have imported the background image (e.g. in Assets.xcassets)
Use resizableImageWithCapInsets: to resize the background image
Put the UIAppearance settings in AppDelegate.m:
[[UITabBar appearance] setBackgroundImage:[[UIImage imageNamed:#"tabbaritem_background.png"] resizableImageWithCapInsets:UIEdgeInsetsMake(0, 0, 0, 0)]];

iOS 7 UIButtonBarItem image does not tint

On my nav bar, I have a couple of rightBarButtonItems that have custom icons (the icon images are white, which worked well with the basic color scheme of iOS 6).
Under iOS 7, loading the images using initWithTitle (see code snippet 1) replaces the "white" color in the icon with the proper global tint (a specific color of dark blue in this case)
Code Snippet 1:
UIBarButtonItem *refreshButton = [[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithTitle:#"" style:(UIBarButtonItemStyle) UIBarButtonSystemItemCancel target:(self) action:#selector(refreshList)];
refreshButton.image = [UIImage imageNamed:#"RefreshIcon.png"];
However, I needed to use initWithCustomView to overcome a weird change in behavior that was causing the icons to move out of view. The basic idea was to specifically set the size of the icons. initWithCustomView solved the sizing problem, but does not display the button images with the global tint, they are displayed in the color of the image (white). Code Snippet 2 shows how I am creating the button with initWithCustomView.
Code Snippet 2:
CGRect frameCustomButton2 = CGRectMake(0.0, 0.0, 18.0, 18.0);
UIButton *customButton2 = [[UIButton alloc] initWithFrame:frameCustomButton2];
[customButton2 setBackgroundImage:iconRefreshButton forState:UIControlStateNormal];
UIBarButtonItem *barCustomButton2 =[[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithCustomView:customButton2 ];
barCustomButton2.image = iconRefreshButton;
[customButton2 addTarget:self action:#selector(refreshList) forControlEvents:UIControlEventTouchUpInside];
All of this code is of course in (void)viewDidLoad. I have tried things like:
barCustomButton2.tintColor = [UIColor blackColor]; //doesn't work
or
[barButtonAppearance setTintColor:[UIColor blackColor]]; // doesn't work
and they do not override the white color of the image. It is almost as if the creation of the custom view takes place after the view looks at the global tint color?
How can I ensure the button icon takes on the global tint?
Thanks!
Just wanted to get this into a root comment to give better context to the "answer" checkmark, and give better formatting.
I was able to figure this one out! You can tell the image to always render as template, which will force it to take on the global tint color.
UIImage *iconRefreshButton = [UIImage imageNamed:#"MyIconFilename.png"];
iconRefreshButton = [iconRefreshButton imageWithRenderingMode:UIImageRenderingModeAlwaysTemplate];
The default, if you don't set it, is "UIImageRenderingModeAutomatic" which means it will render as a template or original image based on context.
You'll either have to work around the issue you were having with the first code snippet, or you'll have to create a UIButton subclass that uses its image as a mask to show the tint color in drawRect:.
I'd recommend the first approach.

Achieving bright, vivid colors for an iOS 7 translucent UINavigationBar

iOS 7.1 UPDATE: Looks like the workaround for modifying the alpha channel in the UINavigationBar has been ignored in this update. Right now, the best solution seems to be to just 'deal with it' and hope that whatever color you choose can render a translucent effect. I am still looking into ways of getting around this.
iOS 7.0.3 UPDATE: The GitHub library we created has been updated to slightly work around this issue when using iOS 7.0.3. Unfortunately, there is no magic formula to support both colors created in iOS 7.0.2 and earlier and iOS 7.0.3. Seems like Apple improved the saturation, but at the cost of opacity (since the blurred translucency is dependant on the opacity level). I, along with a few others, are working on creating a much better fix for this.
I'm sure many people have already come across the problem where iOS 7 tends to desaturate the color of a UINavigationBar that is translucent.
My goal is to achieve a UINavigationBar with this tint color, but translucent:
However, with translucency, I'm getting this. The background view is white, which I understand will make this view a bit lighter:
Is there any way to achieve the original color while still having translucency? I've noticed Facebook has been able to get their bar to be their rich, blue color, as displayed here:
..so I know there has to be some way. Background views obviously make a difference here, but most of their content is also gray/white. It seems that regardless of whatever bar tint color you put in, you are unable to get vivid colors under translucency.
Updated with solution.
Here's the solution that I ended up coming up with. I took aprato's solution and then encompassed the custom UINavigationBar within a UINavigationController subclass. I have created a repository that has this implementation listed below, along with an example app.
////////////////////////////
// CRNavigationBar.m
////////////////////////////
#import "CRNavigationBar.h"
#interface CRNavigationBar ()
#property (nonatomic, strong) CALayer *colorLayer;
#end
#implementation CRNavigationBar
static CGFloat const kDefaultColorLayerOpacity = 0.5f;
static CGFloat const kSpaceToCoverStatusBars = 20.0f;
- (void)setBarTintColor:(UIColor *)barTintColor {
[super setBarTintColor:barTintColor];
if (self.colorLayer == nil) {
self.colorLayer = [CALayer layer];
self.colorLayer.opacity = kDefaultColorLayerOpacity;
[self.layer addSublayer:self.colorLayer];
}
self.colorLayer.backgroundColor = barTintColor.CGColor;
}
- (void)layoutSubviews {
[super layoutSubviews];
if (self.colorLayer != nil) {
self.colorLayer.frame = CGRectMake(0, 0 - kSpaceToCoverStatusBars, CGRectGetWidth(self.bounds), CGRectGetHeight(self.bounds) + kSpaceToCoverStatusBars);
[self.layer insertSublayer:self.colorLayer atIndex:1];
}
}
#end
////////////////////////////
// CRNavigationController.m
////////////////////////////
#import "CRNavigationController.h"
#import "CRNavigationBar.h"
#interface CRNavigationController ()
#end
#implementation CRNavigationController
- (id)init {
self = [super initWithNavigationBarClass:[CRNavigationBar class] toolbarClass:nil];
if(self) {
// Custom initialization here, if needed.
}
return self;
}
- (id)initWithRootViewController:(UIViewController *)rootViewController {
self = [super initWithNavigationBarClass:[CRNavigationBar class] toolbarClass:nil];
if(self) {
self.viewControllers = #[rootViewController];
}
return self;
}
#end
iOS 7.0.3 UPDATE: As you see above 7.0.3 changed things. I've updated my gist. Hopefully this will just go away as people upgrade.
Original Answer:
I ended up with a hack combining the two of the other answers. I'm subclassing UINavigationBar and adding a layer to the back with some extra space to cover if any of the various height status bars are up. The layer gets adjusted in layout subviews and the color changes whenever you set barTintColor.
Gist: https://gist.github.com/aprato/6631390
setBarTintColor
[super setBarTintColor:barTintColor];
if (self.extraColorLayer == nil) {
self.extraColorLayer = [CALayer layer];
self.extraColorLayer.opacity = self.extraColorLayerOpacity;
[self.layer addSublayer:self.extraColorLayer];
}
self.extraColorLayer.backgroundColor = barTintColor.CGColor;
layoutSubviews
[super layoutSubviews];
if (self.extraColorLayer != nil) {
[self.extraColorLayer removeFromSuperlayer];
self.extraColorLayer.opacity = self.extraColorLayerOpacity;
[self.layer insertSublayer:self.extraColorLayer atIndex:1];
CGFloat spaceAboveBar = self.frame.origin.y;
self.extraColorLayer.frame = CGRectMake(0, 0 - spaceAboveBar, CGRectGetWidth(self.bounds), CGRectGetHeight(self.bounds) + spaceAboveBar);
}
The behavior of tintColor for bars has changed on iOS 7.0. It no longer affects the bar's background and behaves as described for the tintColor property added to UIView. To tint the bar's background, please use -barTintColor.You can use following code to make the app work with both ios6 and ios7.
if(IS_IOS7)
{
self.navigationController.navigationBar.barTintColor = [UIColor blackColor];
self.navigationController.navigationBar.translucent = NO;
}
else
{
self.navigationController.navigationBar.tintColor = [UIColor blackColor];
}
IS_IOS7 is a macro which is defined in pch file as follows.
#define IS_IOS7 ([[UIDevice currentDevice].systemVersion floatValue] >= 7.0)
I didn't come up with this solution but it seems to work fairly well. I just added it to viewDidLoad on my subclass of UINavigationController.
Source: https://gist.github.com/alanzeino/6619253
// cheers to #stroughtonsmith for helping out with this one
UIColor *barColour = [UIColor colorWithRed:0.13f green:0.14f blue:0.15f alpha:1.00f];
UIView *colourView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0.f, -20.f, 320.f, 64.f)];
colourView.opaque = NO;
colourView.alpha = .7f;
colourView.backgroundColor = barColour;
self.navigationBar.barTintColor = barColour;
[self.navigationBar.layer insertSublayer:colourView.layer atIndex:1];
One low-fi way would probably be pinning a UIView that is the height of the Navigation Bar to the top of the view behind the bar. Make that view the same color as the navigation bar but play with the alpha until you get the desired effects:
UIView *backgroundView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, CGRectGetWidth(self.navigationController.navigationBar.frame), 64)];
backgroundView.backgroundColor = [UIColor colorWithRed:0.0 green:0.0 blue:1 alpha:.5];
[self.navigationController.view insertSubview:backgroundView belowSubview:self.navigationController.navigationBar];
UIView behind
(Changed color from lower examples to emphasis transparency. Transparency/blurring is more noticeable when in movement.)
Subclassing the UINavigationBar and placing that same view above the background but behind everything else will probably achieve similar results while being less hacky.
Another solution I've seen tossed around is playing with the alpha of the UINavigationBar:
self.navigationController.navigationBar.alpha = 0.5f;
Edit: Actually, after testing it seems like this doesn't provide the intend behavior (or any behavior):
.8 alpha
Unadjusted alpha
Obviously, you will only want to do this on iOS 7 devices. So, add some version check before you implement any of these.
Instead of creating your UIColor object in the RGB format, use HSB and increase the saturation parameter. (Credits to Sam Soffes who describes this method here)
navigationBar.barTintColor = [UIColor colorWithHue:0.555f saturation:1.f brightness:0.855f alpha:1.f];
Note: This solution is a tradeoff and doesn't work well for colors with high saturation.
To pick the HSB color from your design you can use a tool like ColorSnapper which allows you to simply copy the UIColor HSB format.
You can also try the UIColor Category (GitHub Link) from David Keegan to modify existing colors.
The problem has now been fixed by Apple in the new 7.0.3 release.
I used #aprato's solution but found a few corner cases where the new layers from new VCs (eg. UINavigationItemButtonViews, UINavigationItemViews, etc) would be automatically inserted into a position below the extraColorLayer (which would cause those title or button elements to be affected by the extraColorLayer and thus fainter in color than they normally would be). So I adjusted #aprato's solution to force the extraColorLayer to stay at the index position 1. At index position 1, the extraColorLayer stays right above the _UINavigationBarBackground, but underneath everything else.
Here's my class implementation:
- (void)setBarTintColor:(UIColor *)barTintColor
{
[super setBarTintColor:barTintColor];
if (self.extraColorLayer == nil)
{
self.extraColorLayer = [CALayer layer];
self.extraColorLayer.opacity = kDefaultColorLayerOpacity;
[self.layer insertSublayer:self.extraColorLayer atIndex:1]; // This way the text comes out clear
}
self.extraColorLayer.backgroundColor = barTintColor.CGColor;
}
- (void)layoutSubviews
{
[super layoutSubviews];
if (self.extraColorLayer != nil)
{
self.extraColorLayer.frame = CGRectMake(0, 0 - kSpaceToCoverStatusBars, CGRectGetWidth(self.bounds), CGRectGetHeight(self.bounds) + kSpaceToCoverStatusBars);
}
}
- (void)insertSubview:(UIView *)view aboveSubview:(UIView *)siblingSubview
{
[super insertSubview:view aboveSubview:siblingSubview];
[self.extraColorLayer removeFromSuperlayer];
[self.layer insertSublayer:self.extraColorLayer atIndex:1]; // This way the text comes out clear
}
- (void)insertSubview:(UIView *)view atIndex:(NSInteger)index
{
[super insertSubview:view atIndex:index];
[self.extraColorLayer removeFromSuperlayer];
[self.layer insertSublayer:self.extraColorLayer atIndex:1]; // This way the text comes out clear
}
- (void)insertSubview:(UIView *)view belowSubview:(UIView *)siblingSubview
{
[super insertSubview:view belowSubview:siblingSubview];
[self.extraColorLayer removeFromSuperlayer];
[self.layer insertSublayer:self.extraColorLayer atIndex:1]; // This way the text comes out clear
}
I've improved your code in my fork: https://github.com/allenhsu/CRNavigationController
With my modification, the result color on screen (picked on white background) will be exactly the same value passed into setBarTintColor. I think it's an amazing solution.
None of these hacks are required :). Simply set:
self.navigationController.navigationBar.translucent = NO;
For iOS 7, the default translucency has been kept to TRUE.
On a related note, you can set your title text color (with shadow) easily via:
NSShadow *titleShadow = [[NSShadow alloc] init];
titleShadow.shadowOffset = CGSizeMake(0.0f, -1.0f);
titleShadow.shadowColor = [UIColor blackColor];
NSDictionary *navbarTitleTextAttributes = #{NSForegroundColorAttributeName: [UIColor whiteColor],
NSShadowAttributeName: titleShadow};
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setTitleTextAttributes:navbarTitleTextAttributes];
I came across this Q/A while trying to setup an uniformly colored navigation bar with transparency DISABLED on iOS 7.
After experimenting a while with barTintColor I figured out that a very easy way of having an opaque navigation bar is to make a single pixel image of the desired color, make a stretchable image out of it, and setting it to the backgroundImage of the navigation bar.
UIImage *singlePixelImage = [UIImage imageNamed:#"singlePixel.png"];
UIImage *resizableImage = [singlePixelImage resizableImageWithCapInsets:UIEdgeInsetsZero];
[navigationBar setBackgroundImage:resizableImage forBarMetrics:UIBarMetricsDefault];
Three lines of code, very simple and works BOTH on iOS 6 and iOS 7 (barTintColor is unsupported on iOS 6).
Theres a great Dropin UINavigationController replacement available from Simon Booth available at GitHub Here GitHub - C360NavigationBar
If you're backward supporting iOS6 do a check on the root view controller as such:
PatientListTableViewController *frontViewController = [[PatientListTableViewController alloc] init];
UINavigationController *navViewController = [[UINavigationController alloc] initWithNavigationBarClass:[C360NavigationBar class] toolbarClass:nil];
if ([navViewController.view respondsToSelector:#selector(setTintColor:)]) {
//iOS7
[navViewController.view setTintColor:self.navBarTintColor];
[[C360NavigationBar appearance] setItemTintColor:self.navBarItemTintColor];
} else {
//iOS6
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleBlackOpaque animated:NO];
navViewController.navigationBar.tintColor = self.navBarTintColor;
}
[navViewController pushViewController:frontViewController animated:NO];
self.window.rootViewController = navViewController;
As #bernhard mentioned above it's possible to saturate the bar tint color to get desired navigation bar appearance.
I wrote an BarTintColorOptimizer utility for that kind of adjustment. It optimizes translucent bar tint color to make the bar's actual color match the desired color in iOS 7.x and later. Look at this answer for details.
Frankly speaking, above answers might be right but following trick worked for me with very ease.
// this is complete 100% transparent image
self.imageBlack = [[UIImage imageNamed:#"0102_BlackNavBG"]
resizableImageWithCapInsets:UIEdgeInsetsMake(0, 2, 0, 2)
resizingMode:UIImageResizingModeStretch];
// this is non-transparent but iOS7
// will by default make it transparent (if translucent is set to YES)
self.imageRed = [[UIImage imageNamed:#"0102_RedNavBG"]
resizableImageWithCapInsets:UIEdgeInsetsMake(0, 2, 0, 2)
resizingMode:UIImageResizingModeStretch];
// some navigation controller
[nvCtrLeft.navigationBar setBackgroundImage:self.imageRed
forBarMetrics:UIBarMetricsDefault];
// some another navigation controller
[nvCtrCenter.navigationBar setBackgroundImage:self.imageRed
forBarMetrics:UIBarMetricsDefault];
Here are the images used for self.imageRed and self.imageBlack.
< > black image is in this brackets won't be visible as it is transparent :)
< > red image is in this brackets.
is there a way to use #aprato solution without subclassing UINavigationBar.
In my project my main view is a UIViewController.
the problem is that the navigationController is a readonly property, is there a way to use you class with my project because i can't use : [[UINavigationController alloc] initWithNavigationBarClass:
thanks
An easy way to get the color you want is using
[<NAVIGATION_BAR> setBackgroundImage:<UIIMAGE> forBarPosition:<UIBARPOSITION> barMetrics:<UIBARMETRICS>];
As long as your image has some alpha, the translucency will work and you can set the alpha by changing the image. This was just added in iOS7. The width and height for the image are 640x88px for vertical (add 20 to the 88 if you want it to be underneath the status bar).

Custom tab bar background image - in iOS 4.x

I have made a tab bar iOS project, when I received the request to change the tab bar's background image to a custom image. The project is developed for iOS 4.x, so the iOS5's
[tabBar setTabBarBackgroundImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"custom.jpg"]] does not work. Can you suggest me some simple solutions (if there is any possibility, I would not like to change the entire project)?
Edit:
Only three lines of code can resolve all:
UIImageView *imageView = [[UIImageView alloc] initWithImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"customImage.png"]];
[self.tabBarController.tabBar insertSubview:imageView atIndex:0];
[imageView release];
A possible solution would be to put an UIView with your background image exactly behind the UITabBar. Then lower the opacity of your tabbar to 0.5 so you can see the background-image coming through.
UIView *bckgrndView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(tabbar.frame.coords.x, tabbar.frame.coords.y, tabbar.frame.size.width, tabbar.frame.size.height)];
[bckgrndView setBackgroundImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"custom.jpg"]];
[tabbar.superView insertSubView:bckgrndView belowSubview:tabbar];
tabbar.alpha = 0.5;
[bckgrndView release];
Sorry if my code contains some errors. I tried doing this by heart... But you'll catch the drift.
I have answered similar kind of question here. Hope it will help.
Check out NGTabBarController, an open source tab bar replacement with customizable background image.

Adding a background image to UINavigationBar covers the title

I have successfully added a background image to my UINavigationBar with the following code:
UIImageView *barView = [[UIImageView alloc] initWithImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"subHeader_lg.png"]];
[calculatorBar addSubview:barView];
[barView release];
However, with this method, the title of the view is covered by the image.
If I navigate further into the app, and then back, the title appears on top of the background image like so:
Any ideas how I can get the title to appear on top from the beginning?
I have tried pushing the barView to the back, but that makes it hidden behind everything else.
EDIT:
It seems that the custom draw function is the accepted answer, but I am unable to get the draw function to be called. I have this code at the bottom of my appdelegate.m file
#implementation UINavigationBar (UINavigationBarCustomDraw)
- (void)drawRect:(CGRect)rect
{
UIImage *image = [UIImage imageNamed: #"subHeader_lg.png"];
[image drawInRect:CGRectMake(0, 0, self.frame.size.width, self.frame.size.height)];
}
#end
When you call "addSubview" it adds it above any view that have already been added, thus covering the title.
What you want is
[calculatorBar insertSubview:barView atIndex:0];
However, this won't make it "stick" on subsequent pushes, so use the methods described at http://www.developers-life.com/custom-uinavigationbar-with-image-and-back-button.html for a better solution.
Also in iOS 5, Apple has added a built in way to customize the nav bar see http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/UIKit/Reference/UIAppearance_Protocol/Reference/Reference.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40010906
To set the background image on your navigation bar, use the following.
On iOS 5.x, use
[calculatorBar setBackgroundImage: barView.image forBarMetrics: 0];
On iOS 4.x use
calculatorBar.layer.contents = (id)barView.image.CGImage;

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