2.9 KiB
Adds performant animated GIF support to UIKit. If you're looking for the Japanese prefecture, click here.
How?
Gifu uses a UIImageView
subclass and an animator that keeps track of frames and their durations.
It uses CADisplayLink
to animate the view and only keeps a limited number of
resized frames in-memory, which exponentially minimizes memory usage for large GIF files (+300 frames).
The figure below summarizes how this works in practice. Given an image containing 10 frames, Gifu will load the current frame (red), pre-load the next two frames in this example (orange), and nullify all the other frames to free up memory (gray):
Install
Carthage
- Add the following to your Cartfile:
github "kaishin/Gifu"
- Then run
carthage update
- Follow the current instructions in Carthage's README for up to date installation instructions.
CocoaPods
- Add the following to your Podfile:
pod 'Gifu'
- You will also need to make sure you're opting into using frameworks:
use_frameworks!
- Then run
pod install
with CocoaPods 0.36 or newer.
Usage
Start by instantiating an AnimatableImageView
either in code or Interface Builder, then call animateWithImage(named:)
or animateWithImageData(data:)
on it.
let imageView = AnimatableImageView(frame: CGRect(...))
imageView.animateWithImage(named: "mugen.gif")
You can stop the animation anytime using imageView.stopAnimatingGIF()
, and resume
it using imageView.startAnimatingGIF()
.
The isAnimatingGIF()
method returns the current animation state of the view if it has an animatable image.
See the full documentation.
Demo App
Clone or download the repository and open Gifu.xcworkspace
to check out the demo app.
Compatibility
- iOS 8+
Roadmap
- Add ability to set the frame-rate
Contributors
Misc
- The font used in the logo is Azuki
- The characters used in the icon and example image in the demo are from Samurai Champloo.
License
See LICENSE.