FloatingPanel is a simple and easy-to-use UI component for a new interface introduced in Apple Maps, Shortcuts and Stocks app. The new interface displays the related contents and utilities in parallel as a user wants.
- Features
- Requirements
- Installation
- Getting Started
- View hierarchy
- Usage
- Show/Hide a floating panel in a view with your view hierarchy
- Customize the layout with
FloatingPanelLayout
protocol - Customize the behavior with
FloatingPanelBehavior
protocol - Use a custom grabber handle
- Add tap gestures to the surface or backdrop views
- Create an additional floating panel for a detail
- Move a position with an animation
- Work your contents together with a floating panel behavior
- Notes
- Author
- License
- Simple container view controller
- Fluid animation and gesture handling
- Scroll view tracking
- Common UI elements: Grabber handle, Backdrop and Surface rounding corners
- 1~3 anchor positions(full, half, tip)
- Layout customization for all trait environments(i.e. Landscape orientation support)
- Behavior customization
- Free from common issues of Auto Layout and gesture handling
- Modal presentation
Examples are here.
- Examples/Maps like Apple Maps.app.
- Examples/Stocks like Apple Stocks.app.
FloatingPanel is written in Swift 4.0+. It can be built by Xcode 9.4.1 or later. Compatible with iOS 10.0+.
✏️ The default Swift version is 4.0 because it avoids build errors with Carthage on each Xcode version from the source compatibility between Swift 4.0, 4.2 and 5.0.
FloatingPanel is available through CocoaPods. To install it, simply add the following line to your Podfile:
pod 'FloatingPanel'
✏️ To suppress "Swift Conversion" warnings in Xcode, please set a Swift version to SWIFT_VERSION
for the project in your Podfile. It will be resolved in CocoaPods v1.7.0.
For Carthage, add the following to your Cartfile
:
github "scenee/FloatingPanel"
import UIKit
import FloatingPanel
class ViewController: UIViewController, FloatingPanelControllerDelegate {
var fpc: FloatingPanelController!
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
// Initialize a `FloatingPanelController` object.
fpc = FloatingPanelController()
// Assign self as the delegate of the controller.
fpc.delegate = self // Optional
// Set a content view controller.
let contentVC = ContentViewController()
fpc.set(contentViewController: contentVC)
// Track a scroll view(or the siblings) in the content view controller.
fpc.track(scrollView: contentVC.tableView)
// Add and show the views managed by the `FloatingPanelController` object to self.view.
fpc.addPanel(toParent: self)
}
override func viewWillDisappear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewWillDisappear(animated)
// Remove the views managed by the `FloatingPanelController` object from self.view.
fpc.removePanelFromParent()
}
}
let fpc = FloatingPanelController()
let contentVC = ...
fpc.set(contentViewController: contentVC)
fpc.isRemovalInteractionEnabled = true // Optional: Let it removable by a swipe-down
self.present(fpc, animated: true, completion: nil)
You can show a floating panel over UINavigationController from the container view controllers as a modality of .overCurrentContext
style.
✏️ FloatingPanelController has the custom presentation controller. If you would like to customize the presentation/dismissal, please see FloatingPanelTransitioning.
FloatingPanelController
manages the views as the following view hierarchy.
FloatingPanelController.view (FloatingPanelPassThroughView)
├─ .backdropView (FloatingPanelBackdropView)
└─ .surfaceView (FloatingPanelSurfaceView)
├─ .containerView (UIView)
│ └─ .contentView (FloatingPanelController.contentViewController.view)
└─ .grabberHandle (GrabberHandleView)
// Add the controller and the managed views to a view controller.
// From the second time, just call `show(animated:completion)`.
view.addSubview(fpc.view)
fpc.view.frame = view.bounds // MUST
// In addition, Auto Layout constraints are highly recommended.
// Because it makes the layout more robust on trait collection change.
//
// fpc.view.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = false
// NSLayoutConstraint.activate([...])
//
parent.addChild(fpc)
// Show a floating panel to the initial position defined in your `FloatingPanelLayout` object.
fpc.show(animated: true) {
// Only for the first time
self.didMove(toParent: self)
}
...
// Hide it
fpc.hide(animated: true) {
// Remove it if needed
self.willMove(toParent: nil)
self.view.removeFromSuperview()
self.removeFromParent()
}
NOTE: FloatingPanelController
wraps show
/hide
with addPanel
/removePanelFromParent
for easy-to-use. But show
/hide
are more convenience for your app.
class ViewController: UIViewController, FloatingPanelControllerDelegate {
...
func floatingPanel(_ vc: FloatingPanelController, layoutFor newCollection: UITraitCollection) -> FloatingPanelLayout? {
return MyFloatingPanelLayout()
}
}
class MyFloatingPanelLayout: FloatingPanelLayout {
public var initialPosition: FloatingPanelPosition {
return .tip
}
public func insetFor(position: FloatingPanelPosition) -> CGFloat? {
switch position {
case .full: return 16.0 // A top inset from safe area
case .half: return 216.0 // A bottom inset from the safe area
case .tip: return 44.0 // A bottom inset from the safe area
default: return nil // Or `case .hidden: return nil`
}
}
}
class ViewController: UIViewController, FloatingPanelControllerDelegate {
...
func floatingPanel(_ vc: FloatingPanelController, layoutFor newCollection: UITraitCollection) -> FloatingPanelLayout? {
return (newCollection.verticalSizeClass == .compact) ? FloatingPanelLandscapeLayout() : nil // Returning nil indicates to use the default layout
}
}
class FloatingPanelLandscapeLayout: FloatingPanelLayout {
public var initialPosition: FloatingPanelPosition {
return .tip
}
public var supportedPositions: Set<FloatingPanelPosition> {
return [.full, .tip]
}
public func insetFor(position: FloatingPanelPosition) -> CGFloat? {
switch position {
case .full: return 16.0
case .tip: return 69.0
default: return nil
}
}
public func prepareLayout(surfaceView: UIView, in view: UIView) -> [NSLayoutConstraint] {
return [
surfaceView.leftAnchor.constraint(equalTo: view.safeAreaLayoutGuide.leftAnchor, constant: 8.0),
surfaceView.widthAnchor.constraint(equalToConstant: 291),
]
}
}
- Lay out your content View with the intrinsic height size. For example, see "Detail View Controller scene"/"Intrinsic View Controller scene" of Main.storyboard. The 'Stack View.bottom' constraint determines the intrinsic height.
- Create a layout that adopts and conforms to
FloatingPanelIntrinsicLayout
and use it.
class ViewController: UIViewController, FloatingPanelControllerDelegate {
...
func floatingPanel(_ vc: FloatingPanelController, layoutFor newCollection: UITraitCollection) -> FloatingPanelLayout? {
return RemovablePanelLayout()
}
}
class RemovablePanelLayout: FloatingPanelIntrinsicLayout {
var supportedPositions: Set<FloatingPanelPosition> {
return [.full, .half]
}
func insetFor(position: FloatingPanelPosition) -> CGFloat? {
switch position {
case .half: return 130.0
default: return nil // Must return nil for .full
}
}
...
}
class ViewController: UIViewController, FloatingPanelControllerDelegate {
...
func floatingPanel(_ vc: FloatingPanelController, behaviorFor newCollection: UITraitCollection) -> FloatingPanelBehavior? {
return FloatingPanelStocksBehavior()
}
}
class FloatingPanelStocksBehavior: FloatingPanelBehavior {
...
func interactionAnimator(_ fpc: FloatingPanelController, to targetPosition: FloatingPanelPosition, with velocity: CGVector) -> UIViewPropertyAnimator {
let damping = self.damping(with: velocity)
let springTiming = UISpringTimingParameters(dampingRatio: damping, initialVelocity: velocity)
return UIViewPropertyAnimator(duration: 0.5, timingParameters: springTiming)
}
}
let myGrabberHandleView = MyGrabberHandleView()
fpc.surfaceView.grabberHandle.isHidden = true
fpc.surfaceView.addSubview(myGrabberHandleView)
override func viewDidLoad() {
...
surfaceTapGesture = UITapGestureRecognizer(target: self, action: #selector(handleSurface(tapGesture:)))
fpc.surfaceView.addGestureRecognizer(surfaceTapGesture)
backdropTapGesture = UITapGestureRecognizer(target: self, action: #selector(handleBackdrop(tapGesture:)))
fpc.backdropView.addGestureRecognizer(backdropTapGesture)
surfaceTapGesture.isEnabled = (fpc.position == .tip)
}
// Enable `surfaceTapGesture` only at `tip` position
func floatingPanelDidChangePosition(_ vc: FloatingPanelController) {
surfaceTapGesture.isEnabled = (vc.position == .tip)
}
override func viewDidLoad() {
// Setup Search panel
self.searchPanelVC = FloatingPanelController()
let searchVC = SearchViewController()
self.searchPanelVC.set(contentViewController: searchVC)
self.searchPanelVC.track(scrollView: contentVC.tableView)
self.searchPanelVC.addPanel(toParent: self)
// Setup Detail panel
self.detailPanelVC = FloatingPanelController()
let contentVC = ContentViewController()
self.detailPanelVC.set(contentViewController: contentVC)
self.detailPanelVC.track(scrollView: contentVC.scrollView)
self.detailPanelVC.addPanel(toParent: self)
}
In the following example, I move a floating panel to full or half position while opening or closing a search bar like Apple Maps.
func searchBarCancelButtonClicked(_ searchBar: UISearchBar) {
...
fpc.move(to: .half, animated: true)
}
func searchBarTextDidBeginEditing(_ searchBar: UISearchBar) {
...
fpc.move(to: .full, animated: true)
}
class ViewController: UIViewController, FloatingPanelControllerDelegate {
...
func floatingPanelWillBeginDragging(_ vc: FloatingPanelController) {
if vc.position == .full {
searchVC.searchBar.showsCancelButton = false
searchVC.searchBar.resignFirstResponder()
}
}
func floatingPanelDidEndDragging(_ vc: FloatingPanelController, withVelocity velocity: CGPoint, targetPosition: FloatingPanelPosition) {
if targetPosition != .full {
searchVC.hideHeader()
}
}
}
'Show' or 'Show Detail' segues from a content view controller will be managed by a view controller(hereinafter called 'master VC') adding a floating panel. Because a floating panel is just a subview of the master VC(except for modality).
FloatingPanelController
has no way to manage a stack of view controllers like UINavigationController
. If so, it would be so complicated and the interface will become UINavigationController
. This component should not have the responsibility to manage the stack.
By the way, a content view controller can present a view controller modally with present(_:animated:completion:)
or 'Present Modally' segue.
However, sometimes you want to show a destination view controller of 'Show' or 'Show Detail' segue with another floating panel. It's possible to override show(_:sender)
of the master VC!
Here is an example.
class ViewController: UIViewController {
var fpc: FloatingPanelController!
var secondFpc: FloatingPanelController!
...
override func show(_ vc: UIViewController, sender: Any?) {
secondFpc = FloatingPanelController()
secondFpc.set(contentViewController: vc)
secondFpc.addPanel(toParent: self)
}
}
A FloatingPanelController
object proxies an action for show(_:sender)
to the master VC. That's why the master VC can handle a destination view controller of a 'Show' or 'Show Detail' segue and you can hook show(_:sender)
to show a secondary floating panel set the destination view controller to the content.
It's a great way to decouple between a floating panel and the content VC.
- On iOS 10,
FloatingPanelSurfaceView.cornerRadius
isn't not automatically masked with the top rounded corners because ofUIVisualEffectView
issue. See https://forums.developer.apple.com/thread/50854. So you need to draw top rounding corners of your content. Here is an example in Examples/Maps.
override func viewDidLayoutSubviews() {
super.viewDidLayoutSubviews()
if #available(iOS 10, *) {
visualEffectView.layer.cornerRadius = 9.0
visualEffectView.clipsToBounds = true
}
}
- If you sets clear color to
FloatingPanelSurfaceView.backgroundColor
, please note the bottom overflow of your content on bouncing at full position. To prevent it, you need to expand your content. For example, See Example/Maps App's Auto Layout settings ofUIVisualEffectView
in Main.storyboard.
Shin Yamamoto [email protected] | @scenee
FloatingPanel is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.