28

I need to disable the animation that plays when the orientation changes. Is this possible? If not, is it possible to speed it up?

Just to clarify, i don't want to stop the orientation change, just the animation. I want an instant orientation change.

1

5 Answers 5

50

Yes, it is possible to disable the animation, without breaking everything apart.

The following codes will disable the "black box" rotation animation, without messing with other animations or orientation code:

- (void)didRotateFromInterfaceOrientation:(UIInterfaceOrientation)fromInterfaceOrientation {
    [UIView setAnimationsEnabled:YES];
}


- (BOOL)shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation:(UIInterfaceOrientation)interfaceOrientation {
    [UIView setAnimationsEnabled:NO];
  /* Your original orientation booleans*/

    return TRUE;
}

Place it in your UIViewController and all should be well. Same method can be applied to any undesired animation in iOS.

Best of luck with your project.


For 2016, it appears shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation is not available to be overridden. The following does seem to work, and cause no other harm.

// these DO SEEM TO WORK, 2016
override func willRotateToInterfaceOrientation(
        toInterfaceOrientation:UIInterfaceOrientation, duration:NSTimeInterval)
    {
    UIView.setAnimationsEnabled(false)
    super.willRotateToInterfaceOrientation(toInterfaceOrientation,duration:duration)
    }
override func didRotateFromInterfaceOrientation(
        fromInterfaceOrientation:UIInterfaceOrientation)
    {
    super.didRotateFromInterfaceOrientation(fromInterfaceOrientation)
    UIView.setAnimationsEnabled(true)
    }

However!! Indeed both these functions are deprecated. viewWillTransitionToSize now takes care of both the "before" and "after".

override func viewWillTransitionToSize(size:CGSize,
       withTransitionCoordinator coordinator:UIViewControllerTransitionCoordinator)
    {
    coordinator.animateAlongsideTransition(nil, completion:
        {_ in
        UIView.setAnimationsEnabled(true)
        })
    UIView.setAnimationsEnabled(false)
    super.viewWillTransitionToSize(size, withTransitionCoordinator: coordinator);
    }
5
  • @teedayf No problem. Its useful in many places where you want the default animations gone.
    – Nils Munch
    Jun 5, 2012 at 14:47
  • 1
    Didn't work for me either... but adding it to willRotateToInterfaceOrientation did work.
    – Lawson
    Sep 29, 2013 at 5:02
  • 2
    @Lawson - FWIW, those are now deprecated. See edit!
    – Fattie
    Jul 14, 2016 at 16:30
  • unfortunately this is deprecated on iOS 8+
    – Duck
    Mar 14, 2017 at 10:39
  • any solution for swiftui ? Nov 10, 2021 at 7:51
13

In iOS8 you can disable rotation animations by disabling CALayer animations in your view controller's implementation of viewWillTransitionToSize.

The inverse rotation mentioned in the accepted answer is useful if you want to customize the transition (see WWDC 2014 'View Controller Advancements in iOS 8') but not if you just want to prevent animation.

(N.B. Implementing viewWillTransitionToSize will prevent the deprecated pre-iOS8 rotation APIs from being called.)

- (void)viewWillTransitionToSize:(CGSize)size withTransitionCoordinator:(id<UIViewControllerTransitionCoordinator>)coordinator
{
    [super viewWillTransitionToSize:size withTransitionCoordinator:coordinator];
    [CATransaction begin];
    [CATransaction setDisableActions:YES];
    [coordinator animateAlongsideTransition:^(id<UIViewControllerTransitionCoordinatorContext> context) {
        // You could make a call to update constraints based on the
        // new orientation here.
    } completion:^(id<UIViewControllerTransitionCoordinatorContext> context) {
        [CATransaction commit];
    }];
}
2
  • 1
    this works strangely only for iPhone, on iPad the screen rotation is system animated :( Feb 24, 2016 at 18:17
  • It disable any animation, It isn't useful. Apr 3, 2016 at 22:56
5

Based on Nils Munch's Answer, this is the Swift 3 version:

override func viewWillTransition(to size: CGSize, with coordinator: UIViewControllerTransitionCoordinator) {
    coordinator.animate(alongsideTransition: nil) { (_) in
        UIView.setAnimationsEnabled(true)
    }
    UIView.setAnimationsEnabled(false)
    super.viewWillTransition(to: size, with: coordinator)
}
2

If I remember correctly (this is always the sort of thing I have to play around with for a moment to get right) willRotateToInterfaceOrientation:duration: and willAnimateRotationToInterfaceOrientation:duration: are both inside the animation block, while didRotateFromInterfaceOrientation: runs after the animation block. I believe you would need to lay out your views in willRotate so they appear in the position in which they would appear after the rotation had they not rotated (if that makes sense). This way the animation will animate them from their original (correct) layout to the new (rotated) layout in the opposite direction that the device rotates, creating the appearance of no animation. Once the rotation is complete, you can lay out your views, without animation, in didRotate, giving the impression that they rotate instantly.

Clear as mud, no?

1
  • unfortunately this is deprecated on iOS 8+
    – Duck
    Mar 14, 2017 at 10:38
0

if you re-layout your views when the view is about to be rotated I think when it really rotates it won't have animations. I mean, write a method with the new coordinates, frames, positions for each subview and call that method in willRotateToInterfaceOrientation:duration: or willAnimateFirstHalfOfRotationToInterfaceOrientation:duration: (This is not a smart way of doing things though. I wonder, why do you need no-animation?)

3
  • I'm manually changing orientation in a modal view controller. When i dismiss the modal view controller i want the orientation to have already changed. Nov 27, 2010 at 4:39
  • Then you can try to set your parent controller not to rotate just before the modal view controller appears. Then show your modal view controller(maybe rotate it first), hide it, and the parent controller should be just as before. I believe. Or maybe try playing with this kind of conbinations
    – nacho4d
    Nov 27, 2010 at 4:44
  • You misunderstand. The parent view only allows one orientation. The modal view has a toggle button which allows you to choose which orientation. For example: the parent view is in portrait, you open the modal view and select landscape. The modal dismisses and the parent view goes to landscape orientation. This all works, but the animation is clunky and i'd like to get rid of it. I'd like the parent view to have already switched orientation when the modal view dismisses. Nov 27, 2010 at 4:48

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.