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For my understanding, beginTime can be used to say "hey, start at exactly 12:00 'o clock". But how would I tell this with an CFTimeInterval type? I thought that this one is nothing more than a kind of "float" value to specify seconds.

Or what else would be then the difference to the timeOffset property that is specified in CAMediaTiming protocol?

4 Answers 4

59

What I missed in the docs: beginTime is in "core animation absolute time" so you've to get the current time and specify your offset from that:

// Start in 5 seconds
theAnimation.beginTime = CACurrentMediaTime() + 5;
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    beginTime is specified in parent time space, not relative to absolute time.
    – an0
    Jun 30, 2011 at 6:08
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    @an0, obviously, in my case, the parent time space is identical to CACurrentMediaTime(), so it works just fine. How would you refer to the parent time space? Jun 30, 2011 at 13:44
  • We should use current time in layer time space — parent time space of animation directly added to layer — as the base. If layer's beginTime is set to non-zero, your code won't work. See my answer for the details.
    – an0
    Jul 1, 2011 at 1:48
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You first need to convert to the layer's timespace like so:

let currentLayerTime = myLayer.convertTime(CACurrentMediaTime(), from: nil)

Then you can set the beginTime relative to the layer's now time. For instance, to make an animation begin in 2s:

myAnimation.beginTime = currentLayerTime + 2

You'll also likely want to set the fillMode to .backwards, so that you can set the final property value before you add the animation:

myAnimation.fillMode = .backwards
myLayer.someProperty = someFinalValue
myLayer.addAnimation(myAnimation, forKey: "myAnimationName")
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    Amazing, let currentLayerTime = myLayer.convertTime(CACurrentMediaTime(), from: nil) is so important, because CACurrentMediaTime() maybe not so precise Jan 6, 2022 at 2:55
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No, that is not what beginTime does. It specifies a relative start time from its parent animation (by default multiple animations in a group all fire at once).

From the documentation:

Specifies the begin time of the receiver in relation to its parent object, if applicable.

timeOffset causes it to start animating at the frame it would be at at the offSet time, and when it reaches the end it loops around. In other words, imagine A,B,C,D,E are frames of animation this is what happends in various cases if you set beginTime or timeOffset to a value equal to when you hit frame C in the normal case.

Normal      |A->B->C->D->E
beginTime:  |      A->B->C->D->E
timeOffset: |C->D->E->A->B
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    Just setting timeOffset doesn't delay the animation and change the initial time. Your line for 'timeOffset' is really what would happen is you set 'timeOffset' and 'beginTime'...right? Jul 23, 2009 at 0:32
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    Louis, do you know whether there is a way to just run an animation like: Partial: | - - A->B->C, so basically the same as the beginTime case you mentioned but have it stop when it gets to the end instead of having it loop around?
    – pho0
    May 31, 2011 at 3:45
  • Worked like charm @LouisGerbarg . Thanks
    – Pavan
    Oct 19, 2015 at 9:36
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I think the documentation of CAMediaTiming Protocol is very bad. Time Warp in Animation is a thorough explanation(re-documentation) of all properties of CAMediaTiming Protocol.

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