I've got a question about applying multiple transforms to an UIView. When I animate a rotation of an UIView around it's center point, for example, and then try to rotate it around a point that lies outside it's bounds after that, the second animation is all messed up, e.g. it jitters around or rotates in a completely different way than specified. How can I make it so that the first animation doesn't influence the second, but is still present when the second one is played?
EDIT: Here's the code. First I rotate the view around it's center point:
CALayer *layer = view.layer;
CATransform3D aTransform = CATransform3DIdentity;
CGFloat zDistance = 2000;
aTransform.m34 = 1.0 / -zDistance;
scrollView.layer.sublayerTransform = aTransform;
CGFloat subviewX = 0.5;
CGFloat subviewY = 0.5;
[self setAnchorPoint:CGPointMake(subviewX, subviewY) forView:view];
CATransform3D bTransform = CATransform3DIdentity;
CABasicAnimation *rotateAnim = [CABasicAnimation animationWithKeyPath:@"transform"];
rotateAnim.fromValue= [NSValue valueWithCATransform3D:bTransform];
bTransform = CATransform3DRotate(aTransform,-20*M_PI/180, 1, 1, 0);
rotateAnim.duration=0.05;
rotateAnim.toValue=[NSValue valueWithCATransform3D:bTransform];
layer.transform = bTransform;
[layer addAnimation:rotateAnim forKey:nil];
Now that the layer is rotated, I want to flip it around the left screen border:
CALayer *layer = view.layer;
CATransform3D aTransform = CATransform3DIdentity;
CGFloat zDistance = 2000;
aTransform.m34 = 1.0 / -zDistance;
tileScrollView.layer.sublayerTransform = aTransform;
CGFloat subviewX = ((1/view.frame.size.width)*(view.frame.origin.x));
CGFloat subviewY = 0.5;
[self setAnchorPoint:CGPointMake(-subviewX, subviewY) forView:view];
CATransform3D bTransform = layer.transform;
CABasicAnimation *rotateAnim = [CABasicAnimation animationWithKeyPath:@"transform"];
rotateAnim.fromValue= [NSValue valueWithCATransform3D:bTransform];
bTransform = CATransform3DMakeRotation(-M_PI_2, 0, 1, 0);
rotateAnim.duration=0.2;
rotateAnim.toValue=[NSValue valueWithCATransform3D:bTransform];
layer.transform = bTransform;
[layer addAnimation:rotateAnim forKey:nil];
Since I want the rotated layer to be flipped around, I put CATransform3D bTransform = layer.transform
instead of CATransform3D bTransform = CATransform3DIdentity
at the beginning of the second animation, but again, that only messes the animation up
Another, similar problem I have is that I have an UIView that contains 9 subViews, one of which flips around it's center point every second. But every time I apply a transformation to the superView of those 9 UIViews, the layout of the subViews gets messed up. Does anyone know how to prevent this? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance!
Two things:
In the first transform, you do this:
meaning that you rotate around an axis that is 45° between the x and y axis. That might be what you're trying to do, but it seems strange. Consider changing to
In the second step, if you just want to add the transform onto the current transform (i.e. rotate another 180°), you need to change this line
to
This applies the transformation to the existing transform, instead of ignoring the current transform.