A slider with discrete steps, discrete range, with customizable track, thumb and ticks. Ideal to select steps.
A set of animated labels representing a selection. Can be used alone or in conjunction with a UIControl. Ideal to represent steps. The discrete slider and the camel labels can work in unison.
##Compatibility
TGPControls are AutoLayout ready, support iOS 9 & iOS 8 IB Designable
and IB Inspectable
properties, yet runs as far back as iOS 7. Comes with two demo applications, one in Swift and one in Objective-C.
Copyright disclaimer |
---|
The above slider is inspired by National Parks by National Geographic iPhone App. |
National Parks iPhone App is developped by Rally Interactive LLC. |
The above image, styling, appearance and look & feel all Copyright © 2015 National Geographic Society. |
TGPControls is not associated with National Geographic Society, Rally Interactive LLC or any of it's subsidiaries. |
##Fully Customizable
Control everything about the slider or its labels, starting with colors, images and fonts, including track and ticks shape, and thumb shadows. All computations regarding range and sizing and handled automatically. Use the two classes in tandem to create stunning new controls, which can be resized dynamically, to intergrate beautifully into your application.
Most customization can be done in Interface Builder and require 0 coding.
##How to integrate Using CocoaPods
- iOS 9 and later, iOS 8: install Cocoapods 0.36.0+ CocoaPods-Frameworks, add
use_frameworks!
to your podfile. - iOS 7: restrict yourself to
TGPCamelLabels7.{h,m}
andTGPDiscreteSlider7.{h,m}
. Compatible with Cocoapods 0.35.0. Note: When integrating into an iOS 7 project, use the TGPCamelLabels7 and TGPDiscreteSlider7 classes in Interface Builder.
Besides customization, which you can do entirely under Interface Builder in iOS 8 and later, both TGPDiscreteSlider
and TGPCamelLabels
require surprisingly little code to integrate.
###TGPDiscreteSlider
For simplicity, TGPDiscreteSlider does not descend from UISlider but from UIControl.
It uses a minimumValue
, a tickCount
and an incrementValue
(instead of minimumValue and maximumValue).
All graphic aspects, such as physical spacing of the ticks or physical width of the track are controlled internally.
This makes TGPDiscreteSlider predictable. it is guaranteed to always fit snuggly inside its bounds.
Step 1: register to notifications (just like any UIControl)
[self.discreteSlider addTarget:self
action:@selector(discreteSliderValueChanged:)
forControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
Step 2: respond to notification
- (IBAction)discreteSliderValueChanged:(TGPDiscreteSlider *)sender {
[self.camelLabels setValue:sender.value];
}
That's all, and all you need to create this control:
Change tickStyle, trackStyle, thumbStyle to be one of:
ComponentStyleIOS
= 0 Gives to any component the iOS appearance. Ticks are invisible, track is blue and gray, thumb is round with a shadow.ComponentStyleRectangular
= 1 Boxy look with hard edges.ComponentStyleRounded
= 2 From rounded rectangles to perfects circles, depending on vertical to horizontal ratio.ComponentStyleInvisible
= 3 Surprisingly useful to individually hide ticks, track, or even thumb.
###TGPCamelLabels
Besides font customization, TGPCamelLabels
only requires a set of labels (supplied as strings), and an active index selection.
Step 1: tell the TGPCamelLabels what to select
[self.camelLabels setValue:sender.value];
There is no step 2.
For ease of use, most of the customization can be done inside Interface Builder. You may, however, be interested in these 3 properties programatically:
-
ticksListener
allows you tie a discrete slider to its camel labels. This is your most robust method to not only ensure that the layout of both controls match exactly, but also adjust this spacing when orientation changes. A typical use may beself.discreteSlider.ticksListener = self.camelLabels
-
names
allows you to supply a new set of labels. This supersedes thetickCount
property, which will return the number of labels. A typical use may beself.camelLabels.names = @[@"OFF", @"ON"];
-
ticksDistance
, a less common property, allows you to override the labels spacing entirely. Prefer theticksListener
mechanism if it is available to you. A typical use may beself.camelLabels.ticksDistance = 15
For convenience TGPCamelLabels becomes tap-through (click-through) when backgroundColor
is clearColor
.
You can then use TGPCamelLabels on top of other UI elements:
###Code example
See TGPControlsDemo projects:
TGPControlsDemo
(iOS 9 & 8 + Swift + IBInspectable)TGPControlsDemo7
(iOS 7 + ObjC) projects.
#import "ViewController.h"
#import "TGPDiscreteSlider.h"
#import "TGPCamelLabels.h"
@interface ViewController ()
@property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet TGPDiscreteSlider *oneTo10Slider;
@property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet TGPCamelLabels *oneTo10Labels;
@property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet TGPCamelLabels *alphabetLabels;
@property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet TGPDiscreteSlider *alphabetSlider;
@property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet TGPCamelLabels *switch1Camel;
@property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet TGPCamelLabels *switch2Camel;
@end
@implementation ViewController
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
self.alphabetLabels.names = @[@"A",@"B",@"C",@"D",@"E",@"F", @"G",@"H",@"I",@"J",@"K",@"L",@"M",
@"N",@"O",@"P",@"Q",@"R",@"S", @"T",@"U",@"V",@"W",@"X",@"Y",@"Z"];
self.switch1Camel.names = @[@"OFF", @"ON"];
// Automatically track tick spacing changes
self.alphabetSlider.ticksListener = self.alphabetLabels;
self.oneTo10Slider.ticksListener = self.oneTo10Labels;
}
#pragma mark UISwitch
- (IBAction)switch1ValueChanged:(UISwitch *)sender {
[self.switch1Camel setValue:((sender.isOn) ? 1 : 0)];
}
- (IBAction)switch2TouchUpInside:(UISwitch *)sender {
[self.switch2Camel setValue:((sender.isOn) ? 1 : 0)];
}
@end
###Customization example