1

I have a custom UIView which is a rectangle with rounded corners a drop shadow and a small border.

- (void) drawRect:(CGRect)rect {
    //// General Declarations
    CGContextRef context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();

    //// Shadow Declarations
    CGColorRef shadow = [UIColor colorWithRed:0.0/255.0 green:0.0/255.0 blue:0.0/255.0 alpha:0.3].CGColor;
    CGSize shadowOffset = CGSizeMake(0, 1);
    CGFloat shadowBlurRadius = 2;

    //// Abstracted Graphic Attributes
    CGRect roundedRectangleFrame = CGRectMake(2, 0, rect.size.width - 4, rect.size.height - 2);


    //// Rounded Rectangle Drawing
    UIBezierPath* roundedRectanglePath = [UIBezierPath bezierPathWithRoundedRect: roundedRectangleFrame cornerRadius: 2];
    CGContextSaveGState(context);
    CGContextSetShadowWithColor(context, shadowOffset, shadowBlurRadius, shadow);
    [[UIColor whiteColor] setFill];
    [roundedRectanglePath fill];
    CGContextRestoreGState(context);

    [[UIColor colorWithRed:200.0/255.0 green:200.0/255.0 blue:200.0/255.0 alpha:0.3] setStroke];
    roundedRectanglePath.lineWidth = 0.5;
    [roundedRectanglePath stroke];
}

My problem is that in the simulator everything is perfectly rendered but when I run the code on a device (I use a iPod touch 4 Generation) it only renders the rounded corner rectangle and the border but no shadow. Any ideas?

6
  • Did you tried with a bigger shadow?
    – Larme
    Feb 13, 2013 at 16:18
  • Yes I tried no matter how big I make it it will show on the device, even tried using red color.
    – FrankWest
    Feb 13, 2013 at 16:22
  • Are you drawing outside of your bounds? I.e. is the shadow being clipped? Feb 13, 2013 at 16:26
  • It is drawn inside the bounds and it shows perfectly when I run the code in the simulator but it does not show when I run on the device.
    – FrankWest
    Feb 13, 2013 at 16:32
  • @Larme hinted at this already, but I'd suggest looking more carefully at device pixel ratio issues. That is, do you have the same problem as you do on your device if you set the simulator to a Retina resolution?
    – rickster
    Feb 13, 2013 at 18:11

2 Answers 2

3

You have already found your solution, but I will explain why your original code did not work and why your solution works.

You are using ARC, which means the compiler automatically manages the lifetime of Objective-C objects for you. But the compiler does not know about or manage the lifetime of Core Foundation objects. Your original code says this:

CGColorRef shadow = [UIColor colorWithRed:0.0/255.0 green:0.0/255.0 blue:0.0/255.0 alpha:0.3].CGColor;

When you call +[UIColor colorWithRed:green:blue:], it returns a reference to a UIColor object. You immediately send the CGColor message to the UIColor object, getting a CGColorRef.

Since you don't use the UIColor object later in the method, the compiler thinks it is safe to release the UIColor object immediately at the end of that statement. Releasing the UIColor there deallocates it. When it's deallocated, the UIColor object releases the CGColor object. Since you didn't claim ownership of the CGColor object, that release deallocates the CGColor object. By the time you get to the CGContextSetShadowWithColor statement, the memory that contained the CGColor object is in an unknown state.

Your solution fixes the problem by embedding the +[UIColor colorWithRed:green:blue:] message into the statement that uses the CGColor object. So by the time the statement ends and the UIColor is released and deallocated, you've already handed the CGColor off to the graphics context, which retains it, preventing it from being deallocated.

That's the way I would fix the problem, too. But there are other ways. One other way is to claim ownership of the CGColor object explicitly:

CGColorRef shadow = CGColorRetain([UIColor colorWithRed:0.0/255.0
    green:0.0/255.0 blue:0.0/255.0 alpha:0.3].CGColor);

...

CGContextSetShadowWithColor(context, shadowOffset, shadowBlurRadius, shadow);
CGColorRelease(shadow);
1
  • Thank you for the nice and detailed explanation. I had no clue that ARC does not know how to handle CF objects, although I was always sceptical about the "magic" ARC was doing under the hood.
    – FrankWest
    Feb 13, 2013 at 21:15
1

I can´t really explain why but instead of using a CGColorRef using the UIColor expression itself "solved" the problem. Now it renders perfect in all resolutions in the simulator as well as on the device.

The now working code looks like this:

- (void) drawRect:(CGRect)rect {
//// General Declarations
CGContextRef context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();

//// Shadow Declarations
CGSize shadowOffset = CGSizeMake(0, 1);
CGFloat shadowBlurRadius = 2;

//// Abstracted Graphic Attributes
CGRect roundedRectangleFrame = CGRectMake(2, 0, rect.size.width - 4, rect.size.height - 2);


//// Rounded Rectangle Drawing
UIBezierPath* roundedRectanglePath = [UIBezierPath bezierPathWithRoundedRect: roundedRectangleFrame cornerRadius: 2];
CGContextSaveGState(context);
CGContextSetShadowWithColor(context, shadowOffset, shadowBlurRadius, [UIColor colorWithRed:0.0/255.0 green:0.0/255.0 blue:0.0/255.0 alpha:0.3].CGColor);
[[UIColor whiteColor] setFill];
[roundedRectanglePath fill];
CGContextRestoreGState(context);

[[UIColor colorWithRed:200.0/255.0 green:200.0/255.0 blue:200.0/255.0 alpha:0.3] setStroke];
roundedRectanglePath.lineWidth = 0.5;
[roundedRectanglePath stroke];

}

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