How do I rotate a CALayer 90 degrees? I need to rotate everything include sublayers and the coordinate system.
5 Answers
Obj-C:
theLayer.transform = CATransform3DMakeRotation(90.0 / 180.0 * M_PI, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0);
Swift:
theLayer.transform = CATransform3DMakeRotation(90.0 / 180.0 * .pi, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0)
That is, transform the layer such that it is rotated by 90 degrees (π / 2 radians), with 100% of that rotation taking place around the z-axis.
-
1M_PI is Double and CATransform3DMakeRotation requires angle to be CGFloat, so CGFloat(M_PI) should be used instead Aug 4, 2015 at 15:26
-
In C, the conversion from double to CGFloat is implicit (and casts in C and Objective-C take the form (T)expression, not T(expression). Are you thinking of Swift or C++?) Moreso,
M_PI
is multiplied by adouble
in the statement above, so it's widened, defeating the purpose of the cast. Aug 5, 2015 at 0:12 -
how to make it rotate using the center as the anchor point? Its rotation the whole layer– apinhoJul 18, 2016 at 13:24
-
M_PI causes casting issues in Swift and has been deprecated in favour of
Type.pi
or just.pi
which will use the correct type (in this case,CGFloat.pi
). Feb 10, 2018 at 5:00 -
If I'm animating it I use something like this in my apps:
- (NSObject *) defineZRotation {
// Define rotation on z axis
float degreesVariance = 90;
// object will always take shortest path, so that
// a rotation of less than 180 deg will move clockwise, and more than will move counterclockwise
float radiansToRotate = DegreesToRadians( degreesVariance );
CATransform3D zRotation;
zRotation = CATransform3DMakeRotation(radiansToRotate, 0, 0, 1.0);
// create an animation to hold "zRotation" transform
CABasicAnimation *animateZRotation;
animateZRotation = [CABasicAnimation animationWithKeyPath:@"transform"];
// Assign "zRotation" to animation
animateZRotation.toValue = [NSValue valueWithCATransform3D:zRotation];
// Duration, repeat count, etc
animateZRotation.duration = 1.5;//change this depending on your animation needs
// Here set cumulative, repeatCount, kCAFillMode, and others found in
// the CABasicAnimation Class Reference.
return animateZRotation;
}
Of course you can use it anywhere, don;t have to return it from a method if that doesn;t suit your needs.
-
No need to create a CAAnimation object for rotating a view. For that, animateWithDuration:animations works just fine. See my answer for more details.– Duncan CMay 17, 2012 at 18:48
-
@Duncan I believe this method only applies to UIView, not CALayer. See my response to your answer.– RabMay 18, 2012 at 14:33
Basically something like that:
CGAffineTransform rotateTransform = CGAffineTransformMakeRotation(M_PI / 2.0);
[myCALayer setAffineTransform:rotateTransform];
EDIT: It'll rotate clockwise or counter-clockwise depending on the platform (iOS or Mac OS).
Rab showed how do do it with a CAAnimation
object. Its actually simpler than that:
[myView animateWithDuration: 0.25
animations:
^{
myView.transform = CGAffineTransformMakeRotation(M_PI/2);
}
];
(lifting the transform line from Chris's answer - too lazy to rewrite it since he already provided the perfect code.)
Chris's code would rotate the view without animation. My code above will do the same thing with animation.
By default, animations use ease in, ease out timing. You can change that with a slightly more complex version of the animateWithDuration
call (Use animateWithDuration:delay:options:animations:completion:
instead, and pass in a the desired timing in the options parameter.)
-
animateWithDuration:animations: is a block-based method for UIView. The question here is how to animate CALayer -- CALayer doesn't have this method, or at least it's not documented as having it. Also in 2010 the method animateWithDuration:animations: didn't exist yet (nor, I think, did anything block-based in Obj-C)... so this would be more of an "update for 2012" if it did apply.– RabMay 18, 2012 at 14:30
-
also chris' code will animate. with the standard duration of CALayer animations. Jan 13, 2013 at 17:37
-
Fair points that block-based animations probably didn't exist in 2010, and that this question specifically asked about CALayer, not view, animation. UIView animations end up generating CAAnimations under the covers, but you can only use a UIView animation if the layer you want to animate is a view's backing layer.– Duncan CJun 2, 2019 at 20:01
-
@vikingosegundo, like mine, Chris's code changes the view's transform, not the layer's. I'm pretty sure that changing view properties doesn't create an implicit animation like changing animatable layer properties does. (This is an OLD thread but somebody just down-voted my answer, which prompted me to revisit it.)– Duncan CJun 2, 2019 at 20:04