SSToolkit makes life easier. It is made up of various view controllers, views, and categories that I use in all of my apps. Feel free to fork the repo and make it better.
If you're using this in your project, I'd love to hear about it! Send me an email and let me know which pieces you're using and such.
- SSCollectionView - simple collection view modeled after UITableView and NSCollectionView
- SSGradientView - easily create gradients with optional borders and insets
- SSHUDView - simple heads-up display
- SSLabel - ever wanted to align your text to the top or the bottom
- SSLineView - easily create lines with an inset
- SSLoadingView - flexible loading view
- SSPieProgressView - pie chart style progress bar similar to the one in Xcode's status bar
- SSTextField - simply add edge insets
- SSWebView - handy delegate additions and control over shadows and scroll
- SSTextField - inset your text
- SSTextView - placeholder!
- SSCollectionViewController - manage a collection view
- SSPickerViewController - easily create picker view controllers like the Settings app
- SSViewController - custom modal craziness
- SSDrawingMacros - random macros for drawing and such
- SSConcurrentOperation - a simple wrapper for concurrent NSOperations
Several categories are included and used throughout SSToolkit.
-
Run the following command to add the submodule. Be sure you have are you in the root of your git repository.
$ git submodule add git://github.com/samsoffes/sstoolkit.git Frameworks/SSToolkit
-
In Finder, navigate to the
Frameworks/SSToolkit
folder and drag thexcodeproj
file into theFrameworks
folder in your Xcode project. -
In Finder, drag
SSToolkit.bundle
located inFrameworks/SSToolkit/Resources
into theResources
folder in your Xcode project. -
Select the SSToolkit Xcode project from the sidebar in Xcode. In the file browser on the right in Xcode, click the checkbox next to
libSSToolkit.a
. (If you don't see the file browser, hit Command-Shift-E to toggle it on.) -
Select your target from the sidebar and open Get Info (Command-I).
-
Choose the General tab from the top.
-
Under the Direct Dependencies area, click the plus button, select SSToolkit from the menu, and choose Add Target.
-
Choose the build tab from the top of the window. Make sure the configuration dropdown at the top is set to All Configurations.
-
Add
Frameworks/SSToolkit
to Header Search Path (do not click the Recursive checkbox). -
Add
-all_load -ObjC
to Other Linker Flags.
To use SSToolkit, simply add the following line to your source file.
#import <SSToolkit/SSToolkit.h>
You can add this to your prefix to make things easy if you want. You can also import individual files instead of the whole framework (for faster compile times) by doing something like:
#import <SSToolkit/SSLoadingView.h>
If you are going to use SSToolkit's categories, you will need to import then separately (since some people might not want to use them). You import then like this:
#import <SSToolkit/SSCategories.h>
SSCatalog is included with SSToolkit. There is an iPhone application target and an universal iPad/iPhone application target to demonstrate the various features of SSToolkit.
Here are some related libraries. Some of these used to be part of SSToolkit.
- SSZipArchive - Cocoa library for easily unzipping files.
- SSKeychain - Cocoa library for making working with the keychain less sucky.
- SSOAuthKit - iOS library for working with OAuth 1.0 provider with easy view controllers for getting a Twitter access token.
- SSTableViewCell - iOS UITableViewCell based on ABTableViewCell.
- SSMessagesViewController - iOS Messages.app style table view controller.
Huge thanks to our contributors, Jake Marsh, and Mike Rundle.