IDMPhotoBrowser is a new implementation based on MWPhotoBrowser.
We've added both user experience and technical features inspired by Facebook's and Tweetbot's photo browsers.
- Uses ARC
- Uses AFNetworking for image loading
- Image progress shown
- Minimalistic Facebook-like interface, swipe up to dismiss
- Ability to add custom actions on the action sheet
- Can display one or more images by providing either
UIImage
objects, file paths to images on the device, or URLs to images online - Handles the downloading and caching of photos from the web seamlessly
- Photos can be zoomed and panned, and optional captions can be displayed
[![Alt][screenshot1_thumb]][screenshot1] [![Alt][screenshot2_thumb]][screenshot2] [![Alt][screenshot3_thumb]][screenshot3] [![Alt][screenshot4_thumb]][screenshot4] [![Alt][screenshot5_thumb]][screenshot5] [screenshot1_thumb]: https://raw.github.com/appkraft/IDMPhotoBrowser/master/Screenshots/idmphotobrowser_thumb1.png [screenshot1]: https://raw.github.com/appkraft/IDMPhotoBrowser/master/Screenshots/idmphotobrowser_ss1.png [screenshot2_thumb]: https://raw.github.com/appkraft/IDMPhotoBrowser/master/Screenshots/idmphotobrowser_thumb2.png [screenshot2]: https://raw.github.com/appkraft/IDMPhotoBrowser/master/Screenshots/idmphotobrowser_ss2.png [screenshot3_thumb]: https://raw.github.com/appkraft/IDMPhotoBrowser/master/Screenshots/idmphotobrowser_thumb3.png [screenshot3]: https://raw.github.com/appkraft/IDMPhotoBrowser/master/Screenshots/idmphotobrowser_ss3.png [screenshot4_thumb]: https://raw.github.com/appkraft/IDMPhotoBrowser/master/Screenshots/idmphotobrowser_thumb4.png [screenshot4]: https://raw.github.com/appkraft/IDMPhotoBrowser/master/Screenshots/idmphotobrowser_ss4.png [screenshot5_thumb]: https://raw.github.com/appkraft/IDMPhotoBrowser/master/Screenshots/idmphotobrowser_thumb5.png [screenshot5]: https://raw.github.com/appkraft/IDMPhotoBrowser/master/Screenshots/idmphotobrowser_ss5.png
See the code snippet below for an example of how to implement the photo browser.
First create a photos array containing IDMPhoto objects:
// URLs array
NSArray *photosURL = @[[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3567/3523321514_371d9ac42f_b.jpg"],
[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3629/3339128908_7aecabc34b_b.jpg"],
[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3364/3338617424_7ff836d55f_b.jpg"],
[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3590/3329114220_5fbc5bc92b_b.jpg"]];
// Create an array to store IDMPhoto objects
NSMutableArray *photos = [NSMutableArray new];
for (NSURL *url in photosURL) {
IDMPhoto *photo = [IDMPhoto photoWithURL:url];
[photos addObject:photo];
}
// Or use this constructor to receive an NSArray of IDMPhoto objects from your NSURL objects
NSArray *photos = [IDMPhoto photosWithURLs:photosURL];
There are two main ways to presente the photoBrowser: With a fade on screen or with a zooming effect from an existing view.
Presenting using a simple fade transition:
// Create and setup browser
IDMPhotoBrowser *browser = [[IDMPhotoBrowser alloc] initWithPhotos:photos];
Presenting from a view:
// Create and setup browser
IDMPhotoBrowser *browser = [[IDMPhotoBrowser alloc] initWithPhotos:photos animatedFromView:sender];
You can customize the toolbar. There are three boolean properties you can set: displayActionButton (default is YES), displayArrowButton (default is YES) and displayCounterLabel (default is NO). If you dont want the toolbar at all, you can set displayToolbar = NO.
Toolbar setup example:
browser.displayActionButton = NO;
browser.displayArrowButton = YES;
browser.displayCounterLabel = YES;
If you want to use custom actions, set the actionButtonTitles array with the titles for the actionSheet. Then, implement the photoBrowser:didDismissActionSheetWithButtonIndex: method, from the IDMPhotoBrowser delegate
browser.actionButtonTitles = @[@"Option 1", @"Option 2", @"Option 3", @"Option 4"];
Presenting using a modal view controller:
// Show
[self presentViewController:browser animated:YES completion:nil];
Photo captions can be displayed simply by setting the caption
property on specific photos:
IDMPhoto *photo = [IDMPhoto photoWithFilePath:[[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"photo2l" ofType:@"jpg"]];
photo.caption = @"Campervan";
No caption will be displayed if the caption property is not set.
By default, the caption is a simple black transparent view with a label displaying the photo's caption in white. If you want to implement your own caption view, follow these steps:
- Optionally use a subclass of
IDMPhoto
for your photos so you can store more data than a simple caption string. - Subclass
IDMCaptionView
and override-setupCaption
and-sizeThatFits:
(and any other UIView methods you see fit) to layout your own view and set it's size. More information on this can be found inIDMCaptionView.h
- Implement the
-photoBrowser:captionViewForPhotoAtIndex:
IDMPhotoBrowser delegate method (shown below).
Example delegate method for custom caption view:
- (IDMCaptionView *)photoBrowser:(IDMPhotoBrowser *)photoBrowser captionViewForPhotoAtIndex:(NSUInteger)index {
IDMPhoto *photo = [self.photos objectAtIndex:index];
MyIDMCaptionViewSubclass *captionView = [[MyIDMCaptionViewSubclass alloc] initWithPhoto:photo];
return [captionView autorelease];
}
Just add pod 'IDMPhotoBrowser'
to your Podfile.
Simply add the files inside IDMPhotoBrowser/Classes
to your Xcode project, copying them to your project's directory if required. And also any library inside IDMPhotoBrowser/ExternalLibraries
needed.
This project uses MIT License.