I have an user interface where an item get deleted, I would like to mimic the "move to folder" effect in iOS mail. The effect where the little letter icon is "thrown" into the folder. Mine will get dumped in a bin instead.

I tried implementing it using a CAAnimation on the layer. As far as I can read in the documentations I should be able to set a byValue and a toValue and CAAnimation should interpolate the values. I am looking to do a little curve, so the item goes through a point a bit above and to the left of the items start position.

    CABasicAnimation* animation = [CABasicAnimation animationWithKeyPath:@"position"];
[animation setDuration:2.0f];
[animation setRemovedOnCompletion:NO];
[animation setFillMode:kCAFillModeForwards];    
[animation setTimingFunction:[CAMediaTimingFunction functionWithName: kCAMediaTimingFunctionEaseOut]];
[animation setFromValue:[NSValue valueWithCGPoint:fromPoint]];
[animation setByValue:[NSValue valueWithCGPoint:byPoint]];
[animation setToValue:[NSValue valueWithCGPoint:CGPointMake(512.0f, 800.0f)]];
[animation setRepeatCount:1.0];

I played around with this for some time, but it seems to me that Apple means linear interpolation. Adding the byValue does not calculate a nice arc or curve and animate the item through it.

How would I go about doing such an animation?

Thanks for any help given.

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I'm so late but here goes. I'm trying to do something similar. And it was extremely easy to set it up in a WP7 (Silverlight) app I did recently. You just animate X and Y separately and there you go - an arc. Might be that CAAnimation doesn't support animation X and Y separately. – Jonny Feb 13 at 14:07
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3 Answers

I found out how to do it. It's really possible to animate X and Y separately. If you animate them over the same time (2.0 seconds below) and set a different timing function, it will make it look like it moves in an arc instead of a straight line from start to finish values. To adjust the arc you'd need to play around with setting a different timing function. Not sure if CAAnimation supports any "sexy" timing functions however.

        const CFTimeInterval DURATION = 2.0f;
        CABasicAnimation* animation = [CABasicAnimation animationWithKeyPath:@"position.y"];
        [animation setDuration:DURATION];
        [animation setRemovedOnCompletion:NO];
        [animation setFillMode:kCAFillModeForwards];    
        [animation setTimingFunction:[CAMediaTimingFunction functionWithName:kCAMediaTimingFunctionLinear]];
        [animation setFromValue:[NSNumber numberWithDouble:400.0]];
        [animation setToValue:[NSNumber numberWithDouble:0.0]];
        [animation setRepeatCount:1.0];
        [animation setDelegate:self];
        [myview.layer addAnimation:animation forKey:@"animatePositionY"];

        animation = [CABasicAnimation animationWithKeyPath:@"position.x"];
        [animation setDuration:DURATION];
        [animation setRemovedOnCompletion:NO];
        [animation setFillMode:kCAFillModeForwards];    
        [animation setTimingFunction:[CAMediaTimingFunction functionWithName:kCAMediaTimingFunctionEaseOut]];
        [animation setFromValue:[NSNumber numberWithDouble:300.0]];
        [animation setToValue:[NSNumber numberWithDouble:0.0]];
        [animation setRepeatCount:1.0];
        [animation setDelegate:self];
        [myview.layer addAnimation:animation forKey:@"animatePositionX"];

Edit:

Should be possible to change timing function by using https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/Cocoa/Reference/CAMediaTimingFunction_class/Introduction/Introduction.html (CAMediaTimingFunction inited by functionWithControlPoints:::: ) It's a "cubic Bezier curve". I'm sure Google has answers there. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%A9zier_curve#Cubic_B.C3.A9zier_curves :-)

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Probably not the answer you want - and I can't say for sure if it's correct - but I had looked into a similar thing before and came to the following conclusion:

Don't use CAAnimation.

Instead, set up a timer which files every (for example) 50mS - and do you "moves" inside the timer callback. That way, you can position things however yo want them - whenever you want them.

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I have had a bit similar question several days ago and I implemented it with timer, as Brad says, but not NSTimer. CADisplayLink - that is the timer which should be used for this purpose, as it is synchronized with the frameRate of the application and provides smoother and more natural animation. You can look at my implementation of it in my answer here. This technique really gives much more control on animation than CAAnimation, and is not much more complicated. CAAnimation can't draw anything since it doesn't even redraw the view. It only moves, deforms and fades what is already drawn.

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