An iOS image viewer written in Swift with support for multiple images.
- Swift 3.1 (for Swift 3.0 support, use tag 3.1.1)
- iOS 8.0+
- Xcode 8+
The easiest way is through CocoaPods. Simply add the dependency to your Podfile
and then pod install
:
pod 'Agrume', :git => 'https://github.com/JanGorman/Agrume.git'
Or Carthage. Add the dependency to your Cartfile
and then carthage update
:
github "JanGorman/Agrume"
There are multiple ways you can use the image viewer (and the included Example project shows them all).
For just a single image it's as easy as
import Agrume
@IBAction func openImage(_ sender: Any) {
if let image = UIImage(named: "…") {
let agrume = Agrume(image: image)
agrume.showFrom(self)
}
}
You can also pass in a URL
and Agrume will take care of the download for you.
Agrume defaults to blurring the background view controller but you can also pass in a background color instead and it will use that:
@IBAction func openImage(_ sender: Any) {
let image = UIImage(named: "…")!
let agrume = Agrume(image: Image, backgroundColor: .black)
agrume.hideStatusBar = true
agrume.showFrom(self)
}
If you're displaying a UICollectionView
and want to add support for zooming, you can also call Agrume with an array of either images or URLs.
let agrume = Agrume(images: images, startIndex: indexPath.row, backgroundBlurStyle: .light)
agrume.didScroll = { [unowned self] index in
self.collectionView?.scrollToItem(at: IndexPath(row: index, section: 0),
at: [],
animated: false)
}
agrume.showFrom(self)
This shows a way of keeping the zoomed library and the one in the background synced.
If you want to take control of downloading images (e.g. for caching), you can also set a download closure that calls back to Agrume to set the image. For example, let's use Kingfisher.
import Agrume
import Kingfisher
@IBAction func openURL(_ sender: Any) {
let agrume = Agrume(imageUrl: URL(string: "https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/512759/MapleBacon.png")!, backgroundBlurStyle: .light)
agrume.download = { url, completion in
ImageDownloader.default.downloadImage(with: url, options: [], progressBlock: nil) { image, _, _, _ in
completion(image)
}
}
agrume.showFrom(self)
}
Instead of having to define a handler on a per instance basis you can instead set a handler on the AgrumeServiceLocator
. Agrume will use this handler for all downloads unless overriden on an instance as described above:
import Agrume
AgrumeServiceLocator.shared.setDownloadHandler { url, completion in
// Download data, cache it and remember to call the completion
}
// Some other place
agrume.showFrom(self)
For more dynamic library needs you can implement the AgrumeDataSource
protocol that supplies images to Agrume. Agrume will query the data source for the number of images and if that number changes, reload it's scrolling image view.
import Agrume
let dataSource: AgrumeDataSource = MyDataSourceImplementation()
let agrume = Agrume(dataSource: dataSource)
agrume.showFrom(self)
When showing the Agrume view controller, it'll default to taking a snapshot of the root view and blurring that. You can customize this behaviour by passing in a different view that it will blur and display:
let agrume = Agrume(image: image)
agrume.showFrom(self, backgroundSnapshotVC: self)
You can customize the status bar appearance when displaying the zoomed in view. Agrume
has a statusBarStyle
property:
let agrume = Agrume(image: image)
agrume.statusBarStyle = .lightContent
agrume.showFrom(self)
Agrume is released under the MIT license. See LICENSE for details