This library provides an async image downloader with cache support. For convenience, we added categories for UI elements like UIImageView
, UIButton
, MKAnnotationView
.
- Categories for
UIImageView
,UIButton
,MKAnnotationView
adding web image and cache management - An asynchronous image downloader
- An asynchronous memory + disk image caching with automatic cache expiration handling
- A background image decompression
- A guarantee that the same URL won't be downloaded several times
- A guarantee that bogus URLs won't be retried again and again
- A guarantee that main thread will never be blocked
- Performances!
- Use GCD and ARC
- Image formats supported by UIImage (JPEG, PNG, ...), including GIF
- WebP format, including animated WebP (use the
WebP
subspec)
- iOS 7.0 or later
- tvOS 9.0 or later
- watchOS 2.0 or later
- OS X 10.8 or later
- Xcode 7.3 or later
- For iOS 5 and 6, use any 3.x version up to 3.7.6
- For iOS < 5.0, please use the last 2.0 version.
- Read this Readme doc
- Read the How to use section
- Read the documentation @ CocoaDocs
- Read How is SDWebImage better than X?
- Try the example by downloading the project from Github or even easier using CocoaPods try
pod try SDWebImage
- Get to the installation steps
- Read the SDWebImage 4.0 Migration Guide to get an idea of the changes from 3.x to 4.x
- Find out who uses SDWebImage and add your app to the list.
- If you need help, use Stack Overflow. (Tag 'sdwebimage')
- If you'd like to ask a general question, use Stack Overflow.
- If you found a bug, open an issue.
- If you have a feature request, open an issue.
- If you want to contribute, submit a pull request.
Objective-C:
#import <SDWebImage/UIImageView+WebCache.h>
...
[imageView sd_setImageWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://www.domain.com/path/to/image.jpg"]
placeholderImage:[UIImage imageNamed:@"placeholder.png"]];
Swift:
@import SDWebImage
imageView.sd_setImage(with: URL(string: "http://www.domain.com/path/to/image.jpg"), placeholderImage: UIImage(named: "placeholder.png"))
- For details about how to use the library and clear examples, see The detailed How to use
- Starting with the 4.0 version, we rely on FLAnimatedImage to take care of our animated images.
- If you use cocoapods, add
pod 'SDWebImage/GIF'
to your podfile. - To use it, simply make sure you use
FLAnimatedImageView
instead ofUIImageView
. - Note: there is a backwards compatible feature, so if you are still trying to load a GIF into a
UIImageView
, it will only show the 1st frame as a static image. - Important: FLAnimatedImage only works on the iOS platform, so for all the other platforms (OS X, tvOS, watchOS) we will fallback to the backwards compatibility feature described above
UITableView determines the size of the image by the first image set for a cell. If your remote images don't have the same size as your placeholder image, you may experience strange anamorphic scaling issue. The following article gives a way to workaround this issue:
http://www.wrichards.com/blog/2011/11/sdwebimage-fixed-width-cell-images/
SDWebImage does very aggressive caching by default. It ignores all kind of caching control header returned by the HTTP server and cache the returned images with no time restriction. It implies your images URLs are static URLs pointing to images that never change. If the pointed image happen to change, some parts of the URL should change accordingly.
If you don't control the image server you're using, you may not be able to change the URL when its content is updated. This is the case for Facebook avatar URLs for instance. In such case, you may use the SDWebImageRefreshCached
flag. This will slightly degrade the performance but will respect the HTTP caching control headers:
[imageView sd_setImageWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:@"https://graph.facebook.com/olivier.poitrey/picture"]
placeholderImage:[UIImage imageNamed:@"avatar-placeholder.png"]
options:SDWebImageRefreshCached];
Add these before you call sd_setImageWithURL
[imageView sd_setShowActivityIndicatorView:YES];
[imageView sd_setIndicatorStyle:UIActivityIndicatorViewStyleGray];
imageView.sd_setShowActivityIndicatorView(true)
imageView.sd_setIndicatorStyle(.Gray)
There are three ways to use SDWebImage in your project:
- using CocoaPods
- using Carthage
- by cloning the project into your repository
CocoaPods is a dependency manager for Objective-C, which automates and simplifies the process of using 3rd-party libraries in your projects. See the Get Started section for more details.
platform :ios, '7.0'
pod 'SDWebImage', '~>3.8'
If you are using Swift, be sure to add use_frameworks!
and set your target to iOS 8+:
platform :ios, '8.0'
use_frameworks!
There are 4 subspecs available now: Core
, MapKit
, GIF
and WebP
(this means you can install only some of the SDWebImage modules. By default, you get just Core
, so if you need WebP
, you need to specify it).
Podfile example:
pod 'SDWebImage/WebP'
Carthage is a lightweight dependency manager for Swift and Objective-C. It leverages CocoaTouch modules and is less invasive than CocoaPods.
To install with carthage, follow the instruction on Carthage
github "rs/SDWebImage"
- see Manual install
In the source files where you need to use the library, import the header file:
#import <SDWebImage/UIImageView+WebCache.h>
At this point your workspace should build without error. If you are having problem, post to the Issue and the community can help you solve it.
All source code is licensed under the MIT License.