LNPopupController
is a framework for presenting view controllers as popups of other view controllers, much like the Apple Music and Podcasts apps.
For SwiftUI, check out my LNPopupUI library.
See a video of the modern popup look & feel here and a video of the classic popup look & feel here.
Once a popup bar is presented with a content view controller, the user can swipe or tap the popup bar at any point to present the popup. After finishing, the user dismisses the popup by either swiping or tapping the close button.
The framework is intended to be very generic and work in most situations, so it is implemented as a category over UIViewController
. Each view controller can present a popup bar, docked to a bottom view.
For UITabBarController
subclasses, the default dock view is the tab bar.
For UINavigationController
subclasses, the default dock view is the toolbar.
For other classes, the popup bar is presented at the bottom of the screen. View controller subclasses can provide their own docking views.
The framework correctly maintains the safe area insets of the container controller’s view and its child controllers, as the popup bar is presented and dismissed.
The information displayed on the popup bar is provided dynamically with popup item objects (instances of the LNPopupItem
class) associated with the popup content view controllers. To change this information, update the popup item of the view controller.
Generally, it is recommended to present the popup bar on the outermost container controller. So if you have a view controller contained in a navigation controller, which is in turn contained in a tab bar controller, it is recommended to present the popup bar on the tab bar controller.
Check the demo project for many common use cases of the framework in various scenarios. It contains examples in Swift and Objective C.
- Available for iOS 11 and above, as an Xcode framework or an SPM package
- Good citizen in modern UIKit world
- Modern Objective C syntax and great Swift interoperability
- For SwiftUI, check out my LNPopupUI library.
LNPopupController supports SPM versions 5.1.0 and above. To use SPM, you should use Xcode 11 to open your project. Click File
-> Swift Packages
-> Add Package Dependency
, enter https://github.com/LeoNatan/LNPopupController
. Select the version you’d like to use.
You can also manually add the package to your Package.swift file:
.package(url: "https://github.com/LeoNatan/LNPopupController.git", from: "2.9.2")
And the dependency in your target:
.target(name: "BestExampleApp", dependencies: ["LNPopupController"]),
Add the following to your Cartfile:
github "LeoNatan/LNPopupController"
Make sure you follow the Carthage integration instructions here.
Drag the LNPopupController.xcodeproj
project to your project, and add LNPopupController.framework
to Embedded Binaries in your project target's General tab. Xcode should sort everything else on its own.
CocoaPods is not supported. There are many reasons for this. Instead of CocoaPods, use Carthage. You can continue using CocoaPods for for your other dependencies and Carthage for LNPopupController
.
While the framework is written in Objective C, it uses modern Objective C syntax, so using the framework in Swift should be very easy and intuitive.
Import the module in your project:
import LNPopupController
A popup item should always reflect the popup information about the view controller with which it is associated. The popup item should provide a title and subtitles to display in the popup bar, when the view controller is presented as a popup content controller. In addition, the item may contain additional buttons to display on the leading and/or trailing edges of the popup bar using leadingBarButtonItems
and trailingBarButtonItems
.
To present the popup bar, create a content controller, update its popup item and present the popup bar.
let demoVC = DemoPopupContentViewController()
demoVC.view.backgroundColor = .red
demoVC.popupItem.title = "Hello World"
demoVC.popupItem.subtitle = "And a subtitle!"
demoVC.popupItem.progress = 0.34
tabBarController?.presentPopupBar(withContentViewController: demoVC, animated: true, completion: nil)
You can present a new content controller while the popup bar is presented and when the popup itself is open.
To open and close the popup programatically, use openPopup(animated:completion:)
and closePopup(animated:completion:)
respectively.
tabBarController?.openPopup(animated: true, completion: nil)
Alternatively, you can present the popup bar and open the popup in one animation, using presentPopupBar(withContentViewController:openPopup:animated:completion:)
.
tabBarController?.presentPopupBar(withContentViewController: demoVC, openPopup:true, animated: true, completion: nil)
To dismiss the popup bar, use dismissPopupBarAnimated:completion:
.
tabBarController?.dismissPopupBar(animated: true, completion: nil)
If the popup is open when dismissing the popup bar, the popup content will also be dismissed.
Any UIViewController
subclasses can be popup container view controllers. The popup bar is attached to a bottom docking view. By default, UITabBarController
and UINavigationController
subclasses return their bottom bars as docking view, while other controllers return a hidden 0pt height view on the bottom of the view. In your subclass, override bottomDockingViewForPopupBar
and defaultFrameForBottomDockingView
and return your view and frame accordingly. The returned view must be attached to the bottom of the view controller's view, or results are undefined.
override var bottomDockingViewForPopupBar: UIView? {
return myCoolBottomView
}
override var defaultFrameForBottomDockingView: CGRect {
var bottomViewFrame = myCoolBottomView.frame
if isMyCoolBottomViewHidden {
bottomViewFrame.origin = CGPoint(x: bottomViewFrame.x, y: view.bounds.height)
} else {
bottomViewFrame.origin = CGPoint(x: bottomViewFrame.x, y: view.bounds.height - bottomViewFrame.height)
}
return bottomViewFrame
}
LNPopupController
provides two distinct style of popup look and feel, one based on modern Music app look and feel, and one based on the previous, iOS 9-style look and feel. Popup bar styles are arbitrarily labeled "prominent" for modern style popup bar and "compact" for iOS 9-style. Popup interaction styles are labeled "snap" for modern style snapping popups and "drag" for iOS 9 interactive popup interaction. Popup close buttons styles are labeled "chevron" for modern style chevron close button and "round" for iOS 9-style close buttons. For each, there is a "default" style for choosing the most suitable one for the current operating system version.
The defaults are:
- Prominent bar style
- Snap interaction style
- Chevron close button style
- No progress view style
Customizing the popup bar style is achieved by setting the popup bar's barStyle
property.
navigationController?.popupBar.barStyle = .compact
Customizing the popup interaction style is achieved by setting the popup presentation containing controller's popupInteractionStyle
property.
navigationController?.popupInteractionStyle = .drag
Customizing the popup bar progress view style is achieved by setting the popup bar's progressViewStyle
property.
navigationController?.popupBar.progressViewStyle = .top
To hide the progress view, set the progressViewStyle
property to LNPopupBarProgressViewStyle.none
.
Customizing the popup close button style is achieved by setting the popup content view's popupCloseButtonStyle
property.
navigationController.popupContentView.popupCloseButtonStyle = .round
To hide the popup close button, set the popupCloseButtonStyle
property to LNPopupCloseButtonStyle.none
.
For navigation and tab bar container controllers, the style of the popup bar is determined according to the bottom bar's appearance. For other container controllers, a default style is used, most suitable for the current environment.
To update the popup bar appearance after updating the appearance of the bottom bar of the container controller, call the updatePopupBarAppearance()
method.
Supplying long text for the title and/or subtitle will result in a scrolling text, if text marquee is enabled. Otherwise, the text will be truncated.
The hidesBottomBarWhenPushed
property is supported for navigation and tab bar controllers. When set to true
, the popup bar will transition to the bottom of the pushed controller's view. Setting isToolbarHidden = true
and calling setToolbarHidden(_:animated:)
are also supported.
Status bar management of the popup content view controller is respected and applied when appropriate.
LNPopupContentView
exposes access to the popup interaction gesture recognizer in the way of the popupInteractionGestureRecognizer
property. This gesture recognizer is shared between opening the popup content, by panning the popup bar up (when the popup bar is closed), and closing the popup content, by panning the popup content view (when the popup bar is open).
When opening the popup, the system queries the viewForPopupInteractionGestureRecognizer
property of the popup content view controller to determine to which view to add the interaction gesture recognizer. By default, the property returns the controller's root view. Override the property's getter to change this behavior.
You can implement the delegate of the interaction gesture recognizer in order to influence its behavior, such as preventing popup interaction when the user is interacting with other controls or views inside the popup content.
Note: If you disable the gesture recognizer after opening the popup, you must monitor the state of the popup and reenable the gesture recognizer once closed by the user or through code. Instead, consider implementing the gesture recognizer's delegate and providing custom logic to disable the interaction.
The framework has full right-to-left support.
By default, the popup bar will follow the system's user interface layout direction, but will preserve the bar button items' order.
To customize this behavior, modify the popup bar's semanticContentAttribute
and barItemsSemanticContentAttribute
properties.
Customization can be achieved through the LNPopupBar
, LNPopupContentView
and LNPopupCustomBarViewController
classes.
LNPopupBar
exposes API to customize the default popup bar's appearance, either through UIAppearance
API or directly on specific popup bar objects.
let appearanceProxy = LNPopupBar.appearance(whenContainedInInstancesOf: [UINavigationController.self])
appearanceProxy.titleTextAttributes = [.font: UIFont(name: "Chalkduster", size: 14)!, .foregroundColor: UIColor.yellow]
appearanceProxy.subtitleTextAttributes = [.font: UIFont(name: "Chalkduster", size: 12)!, .foregroundColor: UIColor.green]
appearanceProxy.backgroundStyle = .systemChromeMaterialDark
appearanceProxy.tintColor = .yellow
The framework supports implementing custom popup bars.
To implement a custom popup bar, subclass LNPopupCustomBarViewController
.
In your LNPopupCustomBarViewController
subclass, build your popup bar's view hierarchy and set the controller's preferredContentSize
property with the preferred popup bar height. Override any of the wantsDefaultTapGestureRecognizer
, wantsDefaultPanGestureRecognizer
and/or wantsDefaultHighlightGestureRecognizer
properties to disable the default gesture recognizers functionality in your custom popup bar.
In your subclass, implement the popupItemDidUpdate()
method to be notified of updates to the popup content view controller's item, or when a new popup content view controller is presented (with a new popup item). You must call the super
implementation of this method.
Finally, set the customBarViewController
property of the popup bar object to an instance of your LNPopupCustomBarViewController
subclass. This will change the bar style to LNPopupBarStyle.custom
.
The included demo project includes two example custom popup bar scenes.
The framework supports accessibility and will honor accessibility labels, hints and values. By default, the accessibility label of the popup bar is the title and subtitle provided by the popup item.
To modify the accessibility label and hint of the popup bar, set the accessibilityLabel
and accessibilityHint
properties of the LNPopupItem
object of the popup content view controller.
demoVC.popupItem.accessibilityLabel = NSLocalizedString("Custom popup bar accessibility label", comment: "")
demoVC.popupItem.accessibilityHint = NSLocalizedString("Custom popup bar accessibility hint", comment: "")
To add accessibility labels and hints to buttons, set the accessibilityLabel
and accessibilityHint
properties of the UIBarButtonItem
objects.
let upNext = UIBarButtonItem(image: UIImage(named: "next"), style: .plain, target: self, action: #selector(nextItem))
upNext.accessibilityLabel = NSLocalizedString("Up Next", comment: "")
upNext.accessibilityHint = NSLocalizedString("Double tap to show up next list", comment: "")
To modify the accessibility label and hint of the popup close button, set the accessibilityLabel
and accessibilityHint
properties of the LNPopupCloseButton
object of the popup container view controller.
tabBarController?.popupContentView.popupCloseButton.accessibilityLabel = NSLocalizedString("Custom popup close button accessibility label", comment: "")
tabBarController?.popupContentView.popupCloseButton.accessibilityHint = NSLocalizedString("Custom popup close button accessibility hint", comment: "")
To modify the accessibility label and value of the popup bar progress view, set the accessibilityProgressLabel
and accessibilityProgressValue
properties of the LNPopupItem
object of the popup content view controller.
demoVC.popupItem.accessibilityImageLabel = NSLocalizedString("Custom image label", comment: "")
demoVC.popupItem.accessibilityProgressLabel = NSLocalizedString("Custom accessibility progress label", comment: "")
demoVC.popupItem.accessibilityProgressValue = "\(accessibilityDateComponentsFormatter.stringFromTimeInterval(NSTimeInterval(popupItem.progress) * totalTime)!) \(NSLocalizedString("of", comment: "")) \(accessibilityDateComponentsFormatter.stringFromTimeInterval(totalTime)!)"
- Non-translucent bars are not supported and can cause visual artifacts or layout glitches. Apple has many problem with such bars themselves, and supporting those is not a priority for LNPopupController.
- Instead, either use translucent bars, or set a background color to your bar instead of setting it as not translucent or set
extendedLayoutIncludesOpaqueBars
to true for contained controllers
- Instead, either use translucent bars, or set a background color to your bar instead of setting it as not translucent or set
- Manually hiding tab bars is not supported by the framework or by Apple. Do not hide the tab bar using
tabBar.hidden = YES
, this will lead to undefined behavior by the framework.
The framework uses:
- MarqueeLabel Copyright (c) 2011-2020 Charles Powell
Additionally, the demo project uses:
- LoremIpsum Copyright (c) 2013 Lukas Kubanek