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Self-contained, two-file (.h/.m) iPhone/iPad components that are dead-easy to drop into your projects

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Self-Contained Components for iOS

Two-file (.h / .m) useful components and utility classes that are dead-easy to drop into your iOS projects.

License: MIT (free for any use, no attribution required).

Follow us on twitter: @SoloComponents.

Note: I want to collect as many open-source components as possible, not just publish my own ones. If you have a useful iOS class that does not depend on anything, feel free to fork, add and send me a pull request!

ATPagingView

ATPagingView is a wrapper around UIScrollView in (horizontal) paging mode, with an API similar to UITableView.

Status: production-ready, used by at least one App Store app.

You provide the page views by implementing two delegate methods:

- (NSInteger)numberOfPagesInPagingView:(ATPagingView *)pagingView {
    return 10;
}

- (UIView *)viewForPageInPagingView:(ATPagingView *)pagingView atIndex:(NSInteger)index {
    UIView *view = [pagingView dequeueReusablePage];
    if (view == nil) {
        view = [[[DemoPageView alloc] init] autorelease];
    }
    return view;
}

You are also notified when the user navigates between pages:

- (void)currentPageDidChangeInPagingView:(ATPagingView *)pagingView {
    self.navigationItem.title = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%d of %d", pagingView.currentPageIndex+1, pagingView.pageCount];
}

You can use ATPagingView directly or derive your view controller from ATPagingViewController.

ATPagingViewController is similar to UITableViewController and:

  • defines loadView to create ATPagingView automatically,
  • sets itself as a delegate of ATPagingView,
  • calls reloadData in viewWillAppear: if the paging view is empty,
  • additionally it forwards orientation events to the paging view (see below).

If you want to use ATPagingView without ATPagingViewController, you need to:

  • provide your delegate object using the delegate property,

  • call reloadData to populate the view,

  • if you want to support rotation, you need to invoke willAnimateRotation and didRotate methods from your view controller:

    - (void)willAnimateRotationToInterfaceOrientation:(UIInterfaceOrientation)toInterfaceOrientation duration:(NSTimeInterval)duration {
        [self.pagingView willAnimateRotation];
    }
    
    - (void)didRotateFromInterfaceOrientation:(UIInterfaceOrientation)fromInterfaceOrientation {
        [self.pagingView didRotate];
    }
    

ATArrayView

A container that arranges its items in rows and columns similar to the thumbnails screen in Photos.app, the API is modeled after UITableView.

Status: beta.

Enjoy the familiar delegate methods:

- (NSInteger)numberOfItemsInArrayView:(ATArrayView *)arrayView {
    return 97;
}

- (UIView *)viewForItemInArrayView:(ATArrayView *)arrayView atIndex:(NSInteger)index {
    DemoItemView *itemView = (DemoItemView *) [arrayView dequeueReusableItem];
    if (itemView == nil) {
        itemView = [[[DemoItemView alloc] init] autorelease];
    }
    return itemView;
}

There's ATArrayViewController which further reduces the amount of boilerplate code you have to write. Similar to UITableViewController, it:

  • overrides loadView to create ATArrayView automatically,
  • sets itself as a delegate of the array view,
  • calls reloadData in viewWillAppear: if the array view is empty.

ATByteImage

Allows to easily use an image (CGImageRef) backed by a malloc'ed chunk of memory. This means you can read or manipulate image bytes directly.

Status: ready for production use.

Using ATByteImage:

ATByteImage *blurred = [[ATByteImage alloc] initWithSize:blurredSize];
[blurred clear];

ATByteImageContext *blurredContext = [blurred newContext];
CGContextSetBlendMode(blurredContext.CGContext, kCGBlendModeNormal);
... draw using blurredContext.CGContext ...
[blurredContext release];

  UIImage *myOverlay = [blurred extractImage];

Here's another example. The following function is useful in background image loading code:

// Returns an uncompressed (decoded) UIImage, optimized for drawing speed.
//
// This is a middle ground between [UIImage imageNamed:] and a plain
// [UIImage imageWithContentsOfFile:], as follows:
//
// * [UIImage imageWithContentsOfFile:] loads image data from disk and
//   decodes it each time you display the image.
//
//   If you are using CATiledLayer to display a large image (and you should,
//   since UIImageView is not recommended for images bigger than ~1024x1024),
//   the whole JPEG will decoded for EACH tile you display.
//
// * [UIImage imageNamed:@"xxx"] only ever decodes the image once, just as you
//   wanted. However it also caches the image and seems to sometimes (always?)
//   not release the data even after you release your UIImage.
//
//   An app that loads several large images via 'imageNamed' will thus crash
//   quite soon with unfamous "error 0".
//
//   Another undesired quality of 'imageNamed' is that the image is loaded and
//   decoded when it is displayed for the first time, which means you can't
//   really do the decoding in a background thread.
//
// * DecompressUIImage([UIImage imageWithContentsOfFile:@"xx.jpg"]) is the
//   sweet spot between the two — it returns a fully decoded image which can
//   be displayed quickly, and memory management is entirely up to you.
//
UIImage *DecompressUIImage(UIImage *image) {
    ATByteImage *byteImage = [[[ATByteImage alloc] initWithImage:image] autorelease];
    return [byteImage extractImage];
}

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