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i'm trying to make a UIView shake when a button is pressed.

I am adapting the code I found on http://www.cimgf.com/2008/02/27/core-animation-tutorial-window-shake-effect/.

However, by trying to adapt the following code to shake a UIView, it does not work:

- (void)animate {
    const int numberOfShakes = 8;
    const float durationOfShake = 0.5f;
    const float vigourOfShake = 0.1f;

    CAKeyframeAnimation *shakeAnimation = [CAKeyframeAnimation animation];

    CGRect frame = lockView.frame;

    CGMutablePathRef shakePath = CGPathCreateMutable();
    CGPathMoveToPoint(shakePath, NULL, CGRectGetMinX(frame), CGRectGetMinY(frame));

    for (int index = 0; index < numberOfShakes; ++index) {
        CGPathAddLineToPoint(shakePath, NULL, CGRectGetMinX(frame) - frame.size.width * vigourOfShake, CGRectGetMinY(frame));

        CGPathAddLineToPoint(shakePath, NULL, CGRectGetMinX(frame) + frame.size.width * vigourOfShake, CGRectGetMinY(frame));
    }

    CGPathCloseSubpath(shakePath);

    shakeAnimation.path = shakePath;
    shakeAnimation.duration = durationOfShake;


    [lockView.layer addAnimation:shakeAnimation forKey:@"frameOrigin"];

}
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5 Answers

up vote 32 down vote accepted

I wrote that post. It's overkill for a UIView, plus the parameters are geared toward an OSX app. Do this instead.

CABasicAnimation *animation = 
                         [CABasicAnimation animationWithKeyPath:@"position"];
[animation setDuration:0.05];
[animation setRepeatCount:8];
[animation setAutoreverses:YES];
[animation setFromValue:[NSValue valueWithCGPoint:
               CGPointMake([lockView center].x - 20.0f, [lockView center].y)]];
[animation setToValue:[NSValue valueWithCGPoint:
               CGPointMake([lockView center].x + 20.0f, [lockView center].y)]];
[[lockView layer] addAnimation:animation forKey:@"position"];

You'll have to play with the duration and repeatCount parameters as well as the x distance from center in the from and to values, but it should give you what you need. I hope that helps. Let me know if you have any questions.

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Thanks so much for that, I couldn't figure out what to do! – Jack Greenhill Oct 5 '10 at 20:33
9  
"I wrote that post." +1 – Yar Sep 15 '11 at 4:45

You can try this piece of code:

to call the code below, use: [self earthquake:myObject];

#pragma mark EarthQuake Methods

- (void)earthquake:(UIView*)itemView
{
    AudioServicesPlaySystemSound(kSystemSoundID_Vibrate); 

    CGFloat t = 2.0;

    CGAffineTransform leftQuake  = CGAffineTransformTranslate(CGAffineTransformIdentity, t, -t);
    CGAffineTransform rightQuake = CGAffineTransformTranslate(CGAffineTransformIdentity, -t, t);

    itemView.transform = leftQuake;  // starting point

    [UIView beginAnimations:@"earthquake" context:itemView];
    [UIView setAnimationRepeatAutoreverses:YES]; // important
    [UIView setAnimationRepeatCount:3];
    [UIView setAnimationDuration:0.05];
    [UIView setAnimationDelegate:self];
    [UIView setAnimationDidStopSelector:@selector(earthquakeEnded:finished:context:)];

    itemView.transform = rightQuake; // end here & auto-reverse

    [UIView commitAnimations];
}

- (void)earthquakeEnded:(NSString *)animationID finished:(NSNumber *)finished context:(void *)context 
{
    if ([finished boolValue]) 
    {
        UIView* item = (UIView *)context;
        item.transform = CGAffineTransformIdentity;
   }
}
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take that one: https://github.com/jonasschnelli/UIView-I7ShakeAnimation

it's easy

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Greate answer. This is the best solution i ve ever come across!! – Selvin Sep 5 '12 at 19:21

You can call this method on UIButton click event

-(void)shakescreen
{
    //Shake screen
    CGFloat t = 5.0;
    CGAffineTransform translateRight = CGAffineTransformTranslate(CGAffineTransformIdentity, t, t);
    CGAffineTransform translateLeft = CGAffineTransformTranslate(CGAffineTransformIdentity, -t, -t);

    self.view.transform = translateLeft;

    [UIView animateWithDuration:0.05 delay:0.0 options:UIViewAnimationOptionAutoreverse|UIViewAnimationOptionRepeat animations:^
    {
         [UIView setAnimationRepeatCount:2.0];
         self.view.transform = translateRight;
    } completion:^(BOOL finished)

      {
          if (finished) 
          {
             [UIView animateWithDuration:0.05 delay:0.0 options:UIViewAnimationOptionBeginFromCurrentState animations:^
          {
              self.view.transform = CGAffineTransformIdentity;
          } 
          completion:NULL];
      }
  }];
}

Hope this will help you :-)

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Here's one that uses a damper function to decay the shake:

- (void)shake
{
    CAKeyframeAnimation* animation = [CAKeyframeAnimation animationWithKeyPath:@"position"];
    animation.duration = 0.5;
    animation.delegate = self;
    animation.fillMode = kCAFillModeForwards;
    animation.removedOnCompletion = YES;
    animation.timingFunction = [CAMediaTimingFunction functionWithName:kCAMediaTimingFunctionLinear];

    NSMutableArray* values = [[NSMutableArray alloc] init];

    int steps = 100;
    double position = 0;
    float e = 2.71;

    for (int t = 0; t < steps; t++)
    {
        position = 10 * pow(e, -0.022 * t) * sin(0.12 * t);
        NSValue* value = [NSValue valueWithCGPoint:CGPointMake([self center].x - position, [self center].y)];
        DDLogInfo(@"Value: %@", value);
        [values addObject:value];
    }

    animation.values = values;
    [[self layer] addAnimation:animation forKey:@"position"];

}
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