Twitter for iPad implements a fancy "pinch to expand paper fold" effect. A short video clip here. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B0TuPsNJ-XY

Can this be done with CATransform3D without OpenGL? A working example would be thankful.

Update: I was interested in the approach or implementation to this animation effect. That's why I offered bounty on this question - srikar

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Thanks for posting the video of that awesome effect. Had no idea Twitter did that. :) – Steven Fisher Jun 28 '11 at 5:44
Wow, bounty works! Thank you for offering the bounty, @Srikar. – Tim Wu Jun 28 '11 at 9:35
5  
yupp bounty works :) thanks to the wonderful community... – Srikar Jun 29 '11 at 7:32
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3 Answers

up vote 16 down vote accepted
+50

Here's a really simple example using a gesture recognizer and CATransform3D to get you started. Simply pinch to rotate the gray view.

- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions
{
    // ...

    CGRect rect = self.window.bounds;
    view = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(rect.size.width/4, rect.size.height/4,
                                                         rect.size.width/2, rect.size.height/2)];
    view.backgroundColor = [UIColor lightGrayColor];
    [self.window addSubview:view];

    CATransform3D transform = CATransform3DIdentity;
    transform.m34 = -1/500.0; // this allows perspective
    self.window.layer.sublayerTransform = transform;

    UIPinchGestureRecognizer *rec = [[UIPinchGestureRecognizer alloc] initWithTarget:self
                                                                              action:@selector(pinch:)];
    [self.window addGestureRecognizer:rec];
    [rec release];

    return YES;
}

- (void)pinch:(UIPinchGestureRecognizer *)rec
{
    CATransform3D t = CATransform3DIdentity;
    t = CATransform3DTranslate(t, 0, -self.view.bounds.size.height/2, 0);
    t = CATransform3DRotate(t, rec.scale * M_PI, 1, 0, 0);
    t = CATransform3DTranslate(t, 0, -self.view.bounds.size.height/2, 0);
    self.view.layer.transform = t;
}
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+1 Great example. – Caleb Jun 28 '11 at 17:59
I don't understand the purpose of the two CATransform3DTranslate method calls. – haroldcampbell Oct 31 '11 at 1:04
@haroldcampbell The goal of those is to rotate around the edge of the layer, rather than the center. – jtbandes Oct 31 '11 at 2:41
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That should be done by setting the anchorPoint property of the layer though. – neilkimmett Feb 23 at 14:30
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Essentially, this effect is comprised of several different steps:

  1. Gesture recognizer to detect when a pinch-out is occurring.
  2. When the gesture starts, Twitter is likely creating a graphics context for the top and bottom portion, essentially creating images from their layers.*
  3. Attach the images as subviews on the top and bottom.
  4. As the fingers flex in and out, use a CATransform3D to add perspective to the images.
  5. Once the view has 'fully stretched out', make the real subviews visible and remove the graphics context-created images.

To collapse the views, do the inverse of the above.

*Because these views are relatively simple, they may not need to be rendered to a graphics context.

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The effect is basically just a view rotating about the X axis: when you drag a tweet out of the list, there's a view that starts out parallel to the X-Z plane. As the user un-pinches, the view rotates around the X axis until it comes fully into the X-Y plane. The documentation says:

The CATransform3D data structure defines a homogenous three-dimensional transform (a 4 by 4 matrix of CGFloat values) that is used to rotate, scale, offset, skew, and apply perspective transformations to a layer.

Furthermore, we know that CALayer's transform property is a CATransform3D structure, and that it's also animatable. Ergo, I think it's safe to say that the folding effect in question is do-able with Core Animation.

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