ElegantPages is an efficient and customizable full screen page view written in SwiftUI.
- Introduction
- Basic Usage
- How It Works
- Customization
- Demos
- Requirements
- Contributing
- Installation
- License
ElegantPages
comes with 2 types of components, ElegantPagesView
and ElegantListView
.
For simpler usage, ElegantPagesView
is recommended as it loads all page views immediately.
For more complex usage, ElegantListView
is recommended as it loads page views on demand(learn more).
The elegance of both these views is that they work as a paging component should be intended to work. One bug that is often seen in SwiftUI is that ScrollView
, List
, or any Gesture
almost certainly interferes with other gestures in the view. However, ElegantPages
fixes this issue and scrolling through a paging component even with embedded Gestures
works elegantly.
The ElegantPagesView
component is available through ElegantHPages
and ElegantVPages
.
import ElegantPages
struct ElegantVPagesExample: View {
let manager = ElegantPagesManager(startingPage: 1, pageTurnType: .earlyCutOffDefault)
var body: some View {
ElegantVPages(manager: manager) {
CustomButtonView()
CustomView()
CustomListView()
}
}
}
The ElegantListView
component is available through ElegantHList
and ElegantVList
.
import ElegantPages
let listData = (1...40).map { _ in "Ideally, this should be more dynamic content to make the most use out of this list" }
struct ElegantVListExample: View {
let manager = ElegantListManager(pageCount: vListData.count, pageTurnType: .earlyCutOffDefault)
var body: some View {
ElegantVList(manager: manager,
pageTurnType: .earlyCutOffDefault) { page in
ExampleView(page: page).erased
}
}
}
struct ExampleView: View {
let page: Int
var body: some View {
VStack {
Text("Page \(page)")
.font(.largeTitle)
Text(listData[page])
.font(.title)
}
.padding()
}
}
ElegantPagesView
is pretty simple. It uses a function builder to gather the page views and puts them in either a HStack
or VStack
depending on the type of ElegantPages
view chosen. As a result, all views are created immediately.
ElegantListView
is quite interesting. For more flexibility, it uses a @ViewBuilder
to get the view for any given page(it's the closure at the end of the ElegantVList
declaration. When it is first initialized, it calls this closure at most 3 times, to get the views for the starting pages. These views are used to initialize an array of at most 3 UIHostingControllers
, whose rootViews
are set to a specific origin in a UIViewController
. Here's the catch, at any given moment, there are at most only 3 pages loaded. As the user scrolls to the next page, old pages are removed and new pages are inserted; the views themselves are juggled as their origins are changed per page turn. This keeps overall memory usage down and also makes scrolling blazingly fast. If you're curious, take a peek.
The following aspects of any ElegantPages
component can be customized:
public enum PageTurnType {
case regular(pageTurnDelta: CGFloat)
case earlyCutoff(config: EarlyCutOffConfiguration)
}
public struct EarlyCutOffConfiguration {
public let scrollResistanceCutOff: CGFloat
public let pageTurnCutOff: CGFloat
public let pageTurnAnimation: Animation
}
A regular page turn only turns the page after the user ends their drag.
- The
pageTurnDelta
represents the percentage of how far across the screen the user has to drag in order for the page to turn when they let go. The default value for this is 0.3, as part of an extension ofPageTurnType
. - The default regular page turn can be accessed through
PageTurnType.regularDefault
An early cutoff page turn turns the page when the user drags a certain distance across the screen.
scrollResistanceCutOff
: The distance that the view is offset as the user drags.pageTurnCutOff
: The distance across the screen the user has to drag before the page is turned(once this value is reached, the page automatically gets turned to and the user's ongoing gesture is invalidated).pageTurnAnimation
: The animation used when the page is turned- The default early cut off page turn can be accessed through
PageTurnType.earlyCutOffDefault
In case scrollResistanceCutOff
isn't clear, here's an example. Say we have a horizontally draggable view. If you drag 80 pixels to the right, the offset that is visible to you is also 80 pixels. The amount you scroll is equal to the visible offset. However, if you have a scroll resistance of say 40 pixels, after dragging 80 pixels to the right, you only see that the view has moved 40 pixels to the right. That is why it is called resistance.
###$ viewForPage
: datasource method called whenever a new page is displayed that asks for the view of the new page. Available only for ElegantList
components
// Use as a function
ElegantVList(..., viewForPage: exampleView)
func exampleView(for page: Int) -> AnyView { ExampleView(...) }
// Use as a closure
ElegantHList(...) { page in ExampleView(...) }
ElegantVList(...)
.onPageChanged(...)
ElegantHList(...)
.onPageChanged(...)
ElegantHPages(...)
.onPageChanged(...)
ElegantVPages(...)
.onPageChanged(...)
// You may want a smaller width for the VList. However, height for the VList will always be the screen height
ElegantVList(...)
.frame(width: ...)
// You may want a smaller height for the HList. However, width for the HList will always be the screen width
ElegantHList(...)
.frame(height: ...)
The demo shown in the GIF can be checked out on ElegantCalendar.
For simpler demos, look at the example repo.
ElegantPages
is available using the Swift Package Manager:
Using Xcode 11, go to File -> Swift Packages -> Add Package Dependency
and enter https://github.com/ThasianX/ElegantPages
If you are using Package.swift
, you can also add ElegantPages
as a dependency easily.
let package = Package(
name: "TestProject",
dependencies: [
.package(url: "https://github.com/ThasianX/ElegantPages", from: "1.4.0")
],
targets: [
.target(name: "TestProject", dependencies: ["ElegantPages"])
]
)
- iOS 13.0+
- Xcode 11.0+
If you find a bug, or would like to suggest a new feature or enhancement, it'd be nice if you could search the issue tracker first; while we don't mind duplicates, keeping issues unique helps us save time and considates effort. If you can't find your issue, feel free to file a new one.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details