7

I've just created a keyframe animation like this:

[UIView animateKeyframesWithDuration:10 delay:0 options:0 animations:^{
    [UIView addKeyframeWithRelativeStartTime:0 relativeDuration:.1 animations:^{
        view.alpha = 0;
    }];
} completion:nil];

And this is a CAKeyframeAnimation that gets created:

(lldb) po [self.layer animationForKey:@"opacity"]
<CAKeyframeAnimation:0x10a6364b0; keyTimes = (
    0,
    "0.1",
    1
); values = (
    1,
    0,
    0
); calculationMode = linear; delegate = <UIViewKeyframeAnimationState: 0x10a6358d0>; fillMode = both; timingFunction = easeInEaseOut; duration = 10; keyPath = opacity>

Question:

The entire animation should take 10 seconds with the opacity animating for 10 * 0.1 = 1 second, right? When I look at the animation, the change is being animated way longer than 1 second.

Why?

4
  • The debug output looks correct (from 0 to 1 second animate from 100% to 0% then for 9 more seconds animate from 0% to 0%). Can you describe what you are seeing? Are you changing the opacity somewhere else? You haven't turned on slow animations in the simulator, right? Dec 15, 2013 at 19:48
  • Yeah, CAKeyframeAnimation looks totally right. What I see is that the opacity is being changed for 2 - 2.5 seconds, not one. I'm not changing it anywhere and Slow Animations are off. Dec 16, 2013 at 13:20
  • 1
    Do you see the same thing if you create the keyframe animation yourself (not via the UIView methods)? Dec 16, 2013 at 13:21
  • @DavidRönnqvist I haven't tried that one yet. Good idea. But I use CAKeyframeAnimation for other things all over the app and it works like a charm. Just wanted to try this new UIView stuff and boom. Dec 16, 2013 at 13:23

1 Answer 1

8
+50

The reason is that the animation's timing function is not linear.

“Time and space are relative concepts.” – Theory of relativity

Layer and animations use a hierarchical timing system, where each object has its own local time which is dependant of its parents and its own timing parameters.

For instance, animations have a timing function that defines their pacing. The default timing functions for an animation created by UIKit is the ease-in ease-out timing function which defines a timing that begins slowly, accelerates through the middle of its duration, and then slows again before completing. It makes for smooth animations that don't start or stop abruptly. However it will also temper with the key times of your keyframe animation which is annoying when you need precise timing.

You can disable the ease-in ease-out timing by passing the UIViewAnimationOptionCurveLinear option to the animateKeyframesWithDuration:delay:options:animations:completion: method. I'm not sure whether it's intended as you need to cast the value from UIViewAnimationOptions to UIViewKeyframeAnimationOptions and the documentation does not say anything about that. Maybe a better (but more verbose) way is to embed the keyframe animation block inside a standard animation block like this:

[UIView animateWithDuration:10 delay:0 options:UIViewAnimationOptionCurveLinear animations:^{
    [UIView animateKeyframesWithDuration:0 /*inherited*/ delay:0 options:0 animations:^{
        [UIView addKeyframeWithRelativeStartTime:0 relativeDuration:.1 animations:^{
            view.alpha = 0;
        }];
    } completion:nil];
} completion:nil];
5
  • I passed two hours wondering why this *$!§ animation wasn't linear even if I was passing UIViewKeyframeAnimationOptionCalculationModeLinear (plus its default). You sir saved me, thanks. Feb 5, 2015 at 13:10
  • I stumbled upon this answer accidentally. I have been doing this myself for years and it sure fixes the problem, although I still haven't been able to find out exactly why I need to "hack" it this way by embedding the standard UIView animation around a KeyFrameAnimation. It works, I know, but my curiosity itches me :-) +1 for analysis.
    – Unheilig
    Jun 11, 2015 at 2:45
  • @Nicolas this doesn't seem to work on iOS 9 anymore. Any alternative?
    – Xzya
    Oct 1, 2015 at 10:37
  • @Xzya Works for me on iOS 9. Oct 12, 2015 at 13:50
  • Good answer. I think you can also add UIViewAnimationOptionCurveLinear in animateKeyframesWithDuration options.
    – vmeyer
    Aug 4, 2016 at 10:20

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.