iOS custom controller used in Jobandtalent app to present new view controllers as cards
iOS custom controller used in the Jobandtalent app to present new view controllers as cards.
This controller behaves very similar to UINavigationController
, maintaining a stack of ViewControllers. The presentation of new view controllers is different though. New view controllers are presented as a new “Card” in front of the current context. The next GIFs show the control in action.
Gif from the example project supplied:
Gif from the Jobandtalent app:
Use Cocoapods to install this custom control in your project.
pod ‘CardStackController’, '~> 0.1.0’
Use the main and only public class CardStackController
to present or stack new view controllers.
After creating and configuring CardStackController
, present it modally (it doesn’t need to be animated). Once the controller itself is presented, you can start stacking cards by calling stack(viewController:)
method.
Example of usage:
cardStackController.delegate = self
cardStackController.cardScaleFactor = CGFloat(firstSlider.value)
cardStackController.firstCardTopOffset = CGFloat(secondSlider.value)
cardStackController.topOffsetBetweenCards = CGFloat(thirdSlider.value)
cardStackController.verticalTranslation = CGFloat(fourthSlider.value)
cardStackController.automaticallyDismiss = false
present(cardStackController, animated: false, completion: nil)
let root = newController()
root.delegate = self
cardStackController.stack(viewController: root)
This control is highly customisable and contains many features, among the ones we highlight:
damping
and frequency
values of the presenting animation to achieve all kinds of animation curves.unstackAll
, unstackUntilRoot
, unstackLast
, etc.CardStackController
uses UIKit Dynamics
to present or stack cards. It creates an attachment behaviour between a card and a fix point on the screen. To prevent the card moving sideways, there is a collision behaviour between each card and the borders of the screen. Finally, there is a DynamicItem behaviour for each card to prevent rotation (this behaviour could also be used to apply density/friction/etc to them, but we didn’t find it necessary).
CardStackController is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.