I built a sample project hosted on GitHub.
There is a table view and its custom cell has a multiple line UILabel and a dynamic image view base on its image size. I built it step by step to verify the auto-layout issue on the custom cell.
In the 3rd sample table view (Table3ViewController) which has the above view structure, I tested it with sample random length text and local images. It succeeds, just like Apple documentation and this thread said.
Actually, all the auto-layout tutorials or examples from google search results are tested base on the local image assets, no SDWebImage usage related, basically.
In Table4ViewController, the UIImageView/UITableViewCell(CustomCell) finished its subview's layout before the SDWebImage set the final image object to UIImageView asynchronously.
Here is my question, how to re-layout the UITableViewCell(CustomCell) after the SDWebImage downloaded the image from the network?
Here are my constraints within CustomCell.
[label mas_makeConstraints:^(MASConstraintMaker *make) {
make.top.equalTo(self.contentView.top);
make.centerX.width.equalTo(self.contentView);
make.bottom.equalTo(imageView.top);
make.height.greaterThanOrEqualTo(#16);
}];
[imageView mas_makeConstraints:^(MASConstraintMaker *make) {
make.top.equalTo(label.bottom);
make.bottom.equalTo(self.contentView.bottom);
make.centerX.width.equalTo(self.contentView);
make.height.lessThanOrEqualTo(#200);
}];
I tried to move the implementation to initWithStyle:reuseIdentifier: or updateConstraints or layoutSubviews method, all the results are the same and failed.
Here is the image view assignment within cellForRow without placeholder image.
__weak __typeof(cell) weakCell = cell;
[cell.theImageView sd_setImageWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:dict.allValues.firstObject]
completed:^(UIImage *_Nullable image, NSError *_Nullable error, SDImageCacheType cacheType, NSURL *_Nullable imageURL) {
__strong __typeof(cell) strongCell = weakCell;
[strongCell setNeedsUpdateConstraints];
[strongCell updateConstraintsIfNeeded];
}];
Assume a network image has size 400x400 points, there is no reserved placeholder image in cell, the update constraint and layout subviews' request will be ready and finished asynchronously successfully. However, the new cell's height won't be recalculated into the contentSize of tableview, the draw process of CustomCell won't be called. It fails.
Here is the image view assignment within cellForRow with placeholder image.
__weak __typeof(cell) weakCell = cell;
[cell.theImageView sd_setImageWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:dict.allValues.firstObject]
placeholderImage:GetImageWithColor(DarkRandomColor, CGRectGetWidth(tableView.frame), 400)
completed:^(UIImage *_Nullable image, NSError *_Nullable error, SDImageCacheType cacheType, NSURL *_Nullable imageURL) {
__strong __typeof(cell) strongCell = weakCell;
[strongCell setNeedsUpdateConstraints];
[strongCell updateConstraintsIfNeeded];
}];
The final image will be drawn with the same size of reserved placeholder image finally, but I expected the final image's size even specified ratio.
So, how to re-layout the image view's size constraint after downloading the image asynchronously?
The following code is blocking UI (can't tap another tab until images finish loading).
I have verified it is the UIImage *imageToShow = [[UIImage alloc] initWithData:data]; call that is the culprit by commenting that line out and keeping the download (which I know happens asynchronously and calls completion handler on main thread).
In the case where only the initWithData: line is commented, the UI response is fine. But how can that line be the line holding up the UI if it is clearly dispatched in background?
- (UICollectionViewCell *)collectionView:(UICollectionView *)collectionView cellForItemAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
...
[objectStore getFileInContainer:#"public_images" filename:filename completionHandler:^(NSData *data, NSURLResponse *response, NSError *error) {
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_global_queue(DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_HIGH, 0), ^{
UIImage *imageToShow = [[UIImage alloc] initWithData:data];
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
collectionImageView.image = imageToShow;
});
});
}];
...
}
UIImage doesn't read and decode the image until the first time it's actually used/drawn. To force this work to happen on a background thread, you have to use/draw the image on the background thread before doing the main thread -setImage: call. Many folks find this counter-intuitive. I explained this in considerable detail in another answer.
The part most likely to cause the UI to hang is the actual setting of the image to the image view, especially if the image is large, because this does (and must) occur on the main thread.
I would suggest resizing or scaling down the image first while you are still operating in the background thread. Then once you have the image resized, hop back on the main thread and assign it to the ``imageView.image```.
Here is a simple example of one way to resize a UIImage: Resize UIImage by keeping Aspect ratio and width
I have a TableViewCell with an ImageView, and I am setting the image like so:
[self.contentImageView setImageWithURL:thumbnail_url];
The contentMode is set to UIViewContentModeScaleAspectFill, and the subviews are clipped.
This works best for images that are either Portrait or Landscape, but UIViewContentModeScaleToFill actually works better for Landscape images, which are far more plentiful.
So, I want to detect the orientation of the image by comparing the width and height, and change the contentMode accordingly.
At first, I tried to inspect/log the ImageView.image property, directly after I set it from the url, but it show's nil. not sure why exactly...?
Next, I decided to put that NSURL into an NSData object, then create an UIImage from that data, and set the ImageView's image property with that iVar, like so:
NSData *data = [NSData dataWithContentsOfURL:thumbnail_url];
UIImage *image = [UIImage imageWithData:data];
[self.contentImageView setImage:image];
// Get image.size etc.
This - particularly the NSData call - slows down the loading of the TableViewCell's considerably, so I'd like to avoid it.
So, I'm wondering if there is anyway to reach into the un-cropped source image properties of the ImageView before the scaling happens to the contentMode?
The problem here is your misunderstanding of how that first method works. setImageWithURL: is a method from one of the open source image loading libraries. Probably either AFNetworking or SDWebImage.
These methods are asynchronous and return immediately. They download the image on a background queue and then return to the main queue to set up the view with it. You are trying to access the image before it is downloaded. The reason the manual NSData approach is working is because it is synchronous and the main queue is stuck while the images download.
Both libraries I mentioned have separate methods with a callback block on the main queue allowing you to act on the response.
For AFNetworking you can use this method:
- (void)setImageWithURLRequest:(NSURLRequest *)urlRequest
placeholderImage:(UIImage *)placeholderImage
success:(void (^)(NSURLRequest *request, NSHTTPURLResponse *response, UIImage *image))success
failure:(void (^)(NSURLRequest *request, NSHTTPURLResponse *response, NSError *error))failure;
For SDWebImage you can use this method:
- (void)sd_setImageWithURL:(NSURL *)url completed:(SDWebImageCompletionBlock)completedBlock;
In either of these, the callback blocks will let you access the image once it is downloaded (if successful).
You can also make something like this work manually using the dataWithContentsOfURL: approach by using GCD like this:
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_global_queue(DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_DEFAULT, 0), ^()
{
NSData *data = [NSData dataWithContentsOfURL:thumbnail_url];
UIImage *image = [UIImage imageWithData:data];
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^()
{
[self.contentImageView setImage:image];
});
});
This is a basic pattern used in networking to perform the network request and processing on a background queue before updating the view on the main queue. Keep in mind this particular piece of code is very simplistic and would require more work to work as nicely as the libraries I mentioned above.
I have a collection view, which contains cells in each section, and each cell has an image in it.
Possibly, the collection view holds 20 or more cells.
I want to load the images off the internet into the cells. The issue is that this can take a few seconds, and I want the collectionView to be displayed even if the images have not downloaded completely.
The collection view is given an array that contains the URLs, and so far, I have been downloading off the internet within collection view cellforitematindexpath
However, the view only becomes visible after all the cells have been loaded, and since each call to collection view cellforitematindexpath downloads an image, if 20 images are pulled off of URLs, it takes way to long.
What can I do to display the view, and THEN download the images, and then display them?
Hope I made myself understandable, if not, please ask!
Thanks!
C
Yes, you could use SDWebImage (as mention at comment above).
Another interesting side you could face out, that if image haven't load yet and user scroll view, it could be problems with dequeueReusableCellWithReuseIdentifier:forIndexPath, so it's better to download images throw id <SDWebImageOperation>.
Prepare for reuse will be something like this:
- (void)prepareForReuse
{
[super prepareForReuse];
if (self.imageOperation)
[self.imageOperation cancel];
self.imageOperation = nil;
}
And load will be like this:
SDWebImageManager *manager = [SDWebImageManager sharedManager];
self.imageOperation = [manager downloadWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:urlString]
options:SDWebImageRetryFailed
progress:nil
completed:^(UIImage *image, NSError *error, SDImageCacheType cacheType, BOOL finished) {
if (image)
{
self.imageView.image = image;
}
}];
I have an UIView with an UIImageView subview. I need to load an image in the UIImageView without blocking the UI. The blocking call seems to be: UIImage imageNamed:. Here is what I thought solved this problem:
-(void)updateImageViewContent {
dispatch_async(
dispatch_get_global_queue(DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_BACKGROUND, 0), ^{
UIImage * img = [UIImage imageNamed:#"background.jpg"];
dispatch_sync(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
[[self imageView] setImage:img];
});
});
}
The image is small (150x100).
However the UI is still blocked when loading the image. What am I missing ?
Here is a small code sample that exhibits this behaviour:
Create a new class based on UIImageView, set its user interaction to YES, add two instances in a UIView, and implement its touchesBegan method like this:
-(void)touchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
if (self.tag == 1) {
self.backgroundColor= [UIColor redColor];
}
else {
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
[self setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"woodenTile.jpg"]];
});
[UIView animateWithDuration:0.25 animations:
^(){[self setFrame:CGRectInset(self.frame, 50, 50)];}];
}
}
Assign the tag 1 to one of these imageViews.
What happens exactly when you tap the two views almost simultaneously, starting with the view that loads an image? Does the UI get blocked because it's waiting for [self setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"woodenTile.jpg"]]; to return ? If so, how may I do this asynchronously ?
Here is a project on github with ipmcc code
Use a long press then drag to draw a rectangle around the black squares. As I understand his answer, in theory the white selection rectangle should not be blocked the first time the image is loaded, but it actually is.
Two images are included in the project (one small: woodenTile.jpg and one larger: bois.jpg). The result is the same with both.
Image format
I don't really understand how this is related to the problem I still have with the UI being blocked while the image is loaded for the first time, but PNG images decode without blocking the UI, while JPG images do block the UI.
Chronology of the events
The blocking of the UI begins here..
.. and ends here.
AFNetworking solution
NSURL * url = [ [NSBundle mainBundle]URLForResource:#"bois" withExtension:#"jpg"];
NSURLRequest * request = [NSURLRequest requestWithURL:url];
[self.imageView setImageWithURLRequest:request
placeholderImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"placeholder.png"]
success:^(NSURLRequest *request, NSHTTPURLResponse *response, UIImage *image) {
NSLog(#"success: %#", NSStringFromCGSize([image size]));
} failure:^(NSURLRequest *request, NSHTTPURLResponse *response, NSError *error) {
NSLog(#"failure: %#", response);
}];
// this code works. Used to test that url is valid. But it's blocking the UI as expected.
if (false)
if (url) {
[self.imageView setImage: [UIImage imageWithData:[NSData dataWithContentsOfURL:url]]]; }
Most of the time, it logs: success: {512, 512}
It also occasionnaly logs: success: {0, 0}
And sometimes: failure: <NSURLResponse: 0x146c0000> { URL: file:///var/mobile/Appl...
But the image is never changed.
The problem is that UIImage doesn't actually read and decode the image until the first time it's actually used/drawn. To force this work to happen on a background thread, you have to use/draw the image on the background thread before doing the main thread -setImage:. This worked for me:
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_global_queue(DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_BACKGROUND, 0), ^{
UIImage * img = [UIImage imageNamed:#"background.jpg"];
// Make a trivial (1x1) graphics context, and draw the image into it
UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(CGSizeMake(1,1));
CGContextRef context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();
CGContextDrawImage(context, CGRectMake(0, 0, 1, 1), [img CGImage]);
UIGraphicsEndImageContext();
// Now the image will have been loaded and decoded and is ready to rock for the main thread
dispatch_sync(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
[[self imageView] setImage: img];
});
});
EDIT: The UI isn't blocking. You've specifically set it up to use UILongPressGestureRecognizer which waits, by default, a half a second before doing anything. The main thread is still processing events, but nothing is going to happen until that GR times out. If you do this:
longpress.minimumPressDuration = 0.01;
...you'll notice that it gets a lot snappier. The image loading is not the problem here.
EDIT 2: I've looked at the code, as posted to github, running on an iPad 2, and I simply do not get the hiccup you're describing. In fact, it's quite smooth. Here's a screenshot from running the code in the CoreAnimation instrument:
As you can see on the top graph, the FPS goes right up to ~60FPS and stays there throughout the gesture. On the bottom graph, you can see the blip at about 16s which is where the image is first loaded, but you can see that there's not a drop in the frame rate. Just from visual inspection, I see the selection layer intersect, and there's a small, but observable delay between the first intersection and the appearance of the image. As far as I can tell, the background loading code is doing its job as expected.
I wish I could help you more, but I'm just not seeing the problem.
You can use AFNetworking library , in which by importing the category
"UIImageView+AFNetworking.m"
and by using the method as follows :
[YourImageView setImageWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:#"http://image_to_download_from_serrver.jpg"]
placeholderImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"static_local_image.png"]
success:^(NSURLRequest *request, NSHTTPURLResponse *response, UIImage *image) {
//ON success perform
}
failure:NULL];
hope this helps .
I had a very similar issue with my application where I had to download lot of images and along with that my UI was continuously updating. Below is the simple tutorial link which resolved my issue:
NSOperations & NSOperationQueues Tutorial
this is the good way:
-(void)updateImageViewContent {
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
UIImage * img = [UIImage imageNamed:#"background.jpg"];
[[self imageView] setImage:img];
});
}
Why don't you use third party library like AsyncImageView? Using this, all you have to do is declare your AsyncImageView object and pass the url or image you want to load. An activity indicator will display during the image loading and nothing will block the UI.
-(void)touchesBegan: is called in the main thread. By calling dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue) you just put the block in the queue. This block will be processed by GCD when the queue will be ready (i.e. system is over with processing your touches). That's why you can't see your woodenTile loaded and assigned to self.image until you release your finger and let GCD process all the blocks that have been queued in the main queue.
Replacing :
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
[self setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"woodenTile.jpg"]];
});
by :
[self setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"woodenTile.jpg"]];
should solve your issue… at least for the code that exhibits it.
Consider using SDWebImage: it not only downloads and caches the image in the background, but also loads and renders it.
I've used it with good results in a tableview that had large images that were slow to load even after downloaded.
https://github.com/nicklockwood/FXImageView
This is an image view which can handle background loading.
Usage
FXImageView *imageView = [[FXImageView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, 100.0f, 150.0f)];
imageView.contentMode = UIViewContentModeScaleAspectFit;
imageView.asynchronous = YES;
//show placeholder
imageView.processedImage = [UIImage imageNamed:#"placeholder.png"];
//set image with URL. FXImageView will then download and process the image
[imageView setImageWithContentsOfURL:url];
To get an URL for your file you might find the following interesting:
Getting bundle file references / paths at app launch
When you are using AFNetwork in an application, you do not need to use any block for load image because AFNetwork provides solution for it. As below:
#import "UIImageView+AFNetworking.h"
And
Use **setImageWithURL** function of AFNetwork....
Thanks
One way i've implemented it is the Following: (Although i do not know if it's the best one)
At first i create a queue by using Serial Asynchronous or on Parallel Queue
queue = dispatch_queue_create("com.myapp.imageProcessingQueue", DISPATCH_QUEUE_SERIAL);**
or
queue = dispatch_get_global_queue(DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_HIGH,0);
**
Which ever you may find better for your needs.
Afterwards:
dispatch_async( queue, ^{
// Load UImage from URL
// by using ImageWithContentsOfUrl or
UIImage *imagename = [UIImage imageWithData:[NSData dataWithContentsOfURL:url]];
// Then to set the image it must be done on the main thread
dispatch_sync( dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
[page_cover setImage: imagename];
imagename = nil;
});
});
There is a set of methods introduced to UIImage in iOS 15 to decode images and create thumbnails asynchronously on background thread
func prepareForDisplay(completionHandler: (UIImage?) -> Void)
Decodes an image asynchronously and provides a new one for display in views and animations.
func prepareThumbnail(of: CGSize, completionHandler: (UIImage?) -> Void)
Creates a thumbnail image at the specified size asynchronously on a background thread.
You can also use a set of similar synchronous APIs, if you need more control over where you want the decoding to happen, e.g. specific queue:
func preparingForDisplay() -> UIImage?
func preparingThumbnail(of: CGSize) -> UIImage?