Transitions in SwiftUI · objc.io


Throughout our SwiftUI Workshop we regularly discover that only a few individuals appear to learn about transitions, though they don’t seem to be very sophisticated and extremely helpful.

Transitions occur when a view is faraway from the view tree, or added to the view tree. Nevertheless, should you’ve carried out some SwiftUI, you should have seen that there isn’t any precise method so as to add views to the view tree — there isn’t any addSubview(_:). As an alternative, you’ll be able to solely add and take away views by the mixture of a state change and utilizing an if assertion (or change or ForEach). In different phrases, views are by some means added and eliminated for us robotically, but transitions fireplace solely as soon as. Earlier than we dive into the main points of this, let’s take into account a quite simple transition:

								struct ContentView: View {
    @State var seen = false
    var physique: some View {
        VStack {
            Toggle("Seen", isOn: $seen)
            if seen {
                Textual content("Hey, world!")
            }
        }
        .animation(.default, worth: seen)
    }
}

							

Once we run the above code we will see the textual content fade out and in. That is the default transition (.opacity). When the view will get inserted into the view tree, it fades in, and as soon as it will get eliminated it fades out. Be aware that if the physique executes once more, the view does not fade in once more until the situation within the if assertion modifications.

To construct up a psychological mannequin of what is taking place, we will take into account the SwiftUI view tree for the above view:

SwiftUI views are ephemeral: the physique of ContentView will get executed and from it a render tree is created. This render tree is persistent throughout view updates, and it represents the precise views on display. As soon as the render tree is up to date, the worth for physique then goes away. This is the render tree after the preliminary rendering:

As soon as we faucet the change, a state change occurs and the physique of ContentView executes once more. The prevailing render tree is then up to date. On this case, SwiftUI seen that the if situation modified from false to true, and it’ll insert our Textual content view into the render tree:

The change within the render tree is what triggers the transition. Transitions solely animate when the present transaction accommodates an animation. Within the instance above, the .animation name causes the transition to animate.

The render tree doesn’t truly exist with that identify or type, however is solely a mannequin for understanding how SwiftUI works. We’re not fully positive how this stuff are represented below the hood.

Once we change our view to have an if/else situation, issues get a bit extra fascinating. This is the code:

								struct ContentView: View {
    @State var seen = false
    var physique: some View {
        VStack {
            Toggle("Seen", isOn: $seen)
            if seen {
                Textual content("Hey, world!")
            } else {
                Picture(systemName: "hand.wave")
            }
        }
        .animation(.default, worth: seen)
    }
}

							

Once we render the preliminary view tree, it is going to include a VStack with a Toggle and a Textual content. As soon as the state modifications from false to true, the textual content is changed by a picture. Within the ephemeral view tree there may be at all times both the Textual content or the Picture, by no means each. Within the render tree nonetheless, in the course of the animation the tree will include each views:

As a result of we use the default transition, it appears just like the textual content fades into the picture and again. Nevertheless, you’ll be able to consider them as separate transitions: the textual content has a removing transition (fade out) and the picture has an insertion transition (fade in).


We aren’t restricted to the default fade transition. For instance, here’s a transition that slides in from the forefront when a view is inserted, and removes the view by scaling it down:

								let transition = AnyTransition.uneven(insertion: .slide, removing: .scale)

							

We will then mix it with an .opacity (fade) transition. The .mixed operator combines each transitions in parallel to get the next impact:

								let transition = AnyTransition.uneven(insertion: .slide, removing: .scale).mixed(with: .opacity)
VStack {
    Toggle("Seen", isOn: $seen)
    if seen {
        Textual content("Hey, world!")
            .transition(transition)
    } else {
        Textual content("Hey world!")
            .transition(transition)
    }
}
.animation(.default.velocity(0.5), worth: seen)

							

Be aware that within the pattern above, we used a seen worth to change between the 2 Textual contents, though they’re the identical. We will simplify the code a bit through the use of id(_:). At any time when the worth we move to id modifications, SwiftUI considers this to be a brand new view within the render tree. Once we mix this with our information of transitions, we will set off a transition simply by altering the id of a view. For instance, we will rewrite the pattern above:

								let transition = AnyTransition.uneven(insertion: .slide, removing: .scale).mixed(with: .opacity)
VStack {
    Toggle("Seen", isOn: $seen)
    Textual content("Hey, world!")
        .id(seen)
        .transition(transition)
}
.animation(.default.velocity(0.5), worth: seen)

							

Earlier than the animation, the textual content is current, and in the course of the animation the newly inserted view (with id(false)) is transitioned in, and the previous view (with id(true)) is transitioned out. In different phrases: each views are current in the course of the animation:


When the builtin transitions do not cowl your wants, you may also create customized transitions. There may be the .modifier(energetic:identification) transition. When a view is not transitioning, the identification modifier is utilized. When a view is eliminated, the animation interpolates in between the identification modifier and the energetic modifier earlier than eradicating the view fully. Likewise, when a view is inserted it begins out with the energetic modifier at the beginning of the animation, and ends with the identification modifier on the finish of the animation.

This is an instance of a favourite button with a customized transition. This is not an ideal implementation (we might not hardcode the offsets and width of the button) but it surely does present what’s attainable:

The total code is offered as a gist.


Typically when performing a transition you may see surprising side-effects. In our case we have been nearly at all times capable of resolve these by wrapping the view we’re transitioning inside a container (for instance, a VStack or ZStack). This provides some “stability” to the view tree that may assist stop glitches.

In essence, transitions aren’t very sophisticated. Nevertheless, attaining the consequence you need could be a bit tough typically. To be able to successfully work with transitions it’s important to perceive the distinction between the view tree and the render tree. And while you wish to have customized transitions, you additionally want to know how animations work. We cowl this in each our workshops and our e book Pondering in SwiftUI.

If your organization is considering a workshop on SwiftUI, do get in contact.

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