I'm at wits end trying to figure this out. In CSS, you can do something like this:
img {
position: absolute;
width: 50px;
height: 50px;
top: 0;
right: 0;
}
In Swift, I am using the programatic interface to set layout constraints of an image. It looks like this:
let img = UIImageView(image: UIImage(named: "my-image"))
img.setTranslatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints(false)
mainScrollView.addSubview(img)
mainScrollView.addConstraint(NSLayoutConstraint(item: img, attribute: .Width, relatedBy: .Equal, toItem: nil, attribute: .NotAnAttribute, multiplier: 1, constant: 50))
mainScrollView.addConstraint(NSLayoutConstraint(item: img, attribute: .Height, relatedBy: .Equal, toItem: nil, attribute: .NotAnAttribute, multiplier: 1, constant: 50))
mainScrollView.addConstraint(NSLayoutConstraint(item: img, attribute: .Top, relatedBy: .Equal, toItem: mainScrollView, attribute: .Top, multiplier: 1, constant: 0))
mainScrollView.addConstraint(NSLayoutConstraint(item: img, attribute: .Trailing, relatedBy: .Equal, toItem: mainScrollView, attribute: .Trailing, multiplier: 1, constant: 0))
However for some bizarre reason it respects the width and height layout constraints, even the top one. but it's basically off screen to the left by 50. If I set the last .Trailing
constant to 50
, it actually moves it into view at the top left (yes I'm very confused by this).