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In my application, I would like to present the user with a full-screen photo viewer much like the one used in the Photos app. This is just for a single photo and as such should be quite simple. I just want the user to be able to view this one photo with the ability to zoom and pan.

I have most of it working. And, if I do not center my UIImageView, everything behaves perfectly. However, I really want the UIImageView to be centered on the screen when the image is sufficiently zoomed out. I do not want it stuck to the top-left corner of the scroll view.

Once I attempt to center this view, my vertical scrollable area appears to be greater than it should be. As such, once I zoom in a little, I am able to scroll about 100 pixels past the top of the image. What am I doing wrong?

@interface MyPhotoViewController : UIViewController <UIScrollViewDelegate>
{
    UIImage* photo;
    UIImageView *imageView;
}
- (id)initWithPhoto:(UIImage *)aPhoto;
@end

@implementation MyPhotoViewController

- (id)initWithPhoto:(UIImage *)aPhoto
{
    if (self = [super init])
    {
        photo = [aPhoto retain];

        // Some 3.0 SDK code here to ensure this view has a full-screen
        // layout.
    }

    return self;
}

- (void)dealloc
{
    [photo release];
    [imageView release];
    [super dealloc];
}

- (void)loadView
{
    // Set the main view of this UIViewController to be a UIScrollView.
    UIScrollView *scrollView = [[UIScrollView alloc] init];
    [self setView:scrollView];
    [scrollView release];
}

- (void)viewDidLoad
{
    [super viewDidLoad];

    // Initialize the scroll view.
    CGSize photoSize = [photo size];
    UIScrollView *scrollView = (UIScrollView *)[self view];
    [scrollView setDelegate:self];
    [scrollView setBackgroundColor:[UIColor blackColor]];

    // Create the image view. We push the origin to (0, -44) to ensure
    // that this view displays behind the navigation bar.
    imageView = [[UIImageView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0.0, -44.0,
        photoSize.width, photoSize.height)];
    [imageView setImage:photo];
    [scrollView addSubview:imageView];

    // Configure zooming.
    CGSize screenSize = [[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds].size;
    CGFloat widthRatio = screenSize.width / photoSize.width;
    CGFloat heightRatio = screenSize.height / photoSize.height;
    CGFloat initialZoom = (widthRatio > heightRatio) ? heightRatio : widthRatio;
    [scrollView setMaximumZoomScale:3.0];
    [scrollView setMinimumZoomScale:initialZoom];
    [scrollView setZoomScale:initialZoom];
    [scrollView setBouncesZoom:YES];
    [scrollView setContentSize:CGSizeMake(photoSize.width * initialZoom,
        photoSize.height * initialZoom)];

    // Center the photo. Again we push the center point up by 44 pixels
    // to account for the translucent navigation bar.
    CGPoint scrollCenter = [scrollView center];
    [imageView setCenter:CGPointMake(scrollCenter.x,
        scrollCenter.y - 44.0)];
}

- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
    [super viewWillAppear:animated];
    [[[self navigationController] navigationBar] setBarStyle:UIBarStyleBlackTranslucent];
    [[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleBlackTranslucent animated:YES];
}

- (void)viewWillDisappear:(BOOL)animated
{
    [super viewWillDisappear:animated];
    [[[self navigationController] navigationBar] setBarStyle:UIBarStyleDefault];
    [[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleDefault animated:YES];
}

- (UIView *)viewForZoomingInScrollView:(UIScrollView *)scrollView
{
    return imageView;
}

@end
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What's that setZoomScale call? Are you using my ZoomScrollView? – Andrey Tarantsov May 10 '09 at 4:37

6 Answers

up vote 21 down vote accepted

This code should work on most versions of iOS (and has been tested to work on 3.1 upwards).

It's based on the Apple WWDC code for PhotoScroller.

Add the below to your subclass of UIScrollView, and replace tileContainerView with the view containing your image or tiles:

- (void)layoutSubviews {
    [super layoutSubviews];

    // center the image as it becomes smaller than the size of the screen
    CGSize boundsSize = self.bounds.size;
    CGRect frameToCenter = tileContainerView.frame;

    // center horizontally
    if (frameToCenter.size.width < boundsSize.width)
        frameToCenter.origin.x = (boundsSize.width - frameToCenter.size.width) / 2;
    else
        frameToCenter.origin.x = 0;

    // center vertically
    if (frameToCenter.size.height < boundsSize.height)
        frameToCenter.origin.y = (boundsSize.height - frameToCenter.size.height) / 2;
    else
        frameToCenter.origin.y = 0;

    tileContainerView.frame = frameToCenter;
}
share|improve this answer
1  
Beautiful, worked a treat. – kim3er Oct 5 '10 at 11:53
This works perfectly and I use it all the time. – bentford May 17 '12 at 14:21

I was able to hack out a solution to this problem by constantly modifying the insets of the UIScrollView. It's probably not the highest-performing code out there, but it works relatively well for my purposes. Zooming in and out is a little jumpy with respect to the centering. If anyone else has any pointers on how to improve what I've done, please let me know.

Here is the relevant code from my UIViewController subclass.

- (void)viewDidLoad
{
    [super viewDidLoad];

    // Initialize the scroll view.
    CGSize photoSize = [photo size];
    UIScrollView *scrollView = (UIScrollView *)[self view];
    [scrollView setDelegate:self];
    [scrollView setContentSize:photoSize];
    [scrollView setBackgroundColor:[UIColor blackColor]];
    [scrollView setShowsHorizontalScrollIndicator:NO];
    [scrollView setShowsVerticalScrollIndicator:NO];

    // Create the image view.
    imageView = [[UIImageView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0.0, 0.0, photoSize.width, photoSize.height)];
    [imageView setImage:photo];
    [scrollView addSubview:imageView];

    // Configure zooming.
    CGSize screenSize = [[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds].size;
    CGFloat widthRatio = screenSize.width / photoSize.width;
    CGFloat heightRatio = screenSize.height / photoSize.height;
    CGFloat initialZoom = (widthRatio > heightRatio) ? heightRatio : widthRatio;
    [scrollView setMaximumZoomScale:3.0];
    [scrollView setMinimumZoomScale:initialZoom];
    [scrollView setZoomScale:initialZoom];
    [scrollView setBouncesZoom:YES];

    // Center the photo.
    CGFloat topInset = (screenSize.height - photoSize.height * initialZoom) / 2.0;
    if (topInset > 0.0)
    {
    	[scrollView setContentInset:UIEdgeInsetsMake(topInset - 44.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0)];
    }
}

#pragma mark -
#pragma mark UIScrollViewDelegate

- (UIView *)viewForZoomingInScrollView:(UIScrollView *)scrollView
{
    return imageView;
}

- (void)scrollViewDidScroll:(UIScrollView *)scrollView
{
    CGSize screenSize = [[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds].size;
    CGSize photoSize = [photo size];
    CGFloat topInset = (screenSize.height - photoSize.height * [scrollView zoomScale]) / 2.0;
    if (topInset < 0.0)
    {
    	topInset = 0.0;
    }

    [scrollView setContentInset:UIEdgeInsetsMake(topInset, 0.0, -topInset, 0.0)];
}
share|improve this answer
This works great! Thank you! I have struggled with this for days. – Jonah Sep 21 '09 at 2:58

Have you checked out the UIViewAutoresizing options?

(from the documentation)

UIViewAutoresizing
Specifies how a view is automatically resized.

enum {
   UIViewAutoresizingNone                 = 0,
   UIViewAutoresizingFlexibleLeftMargin   = 1 << 0,
   UIViewAutoresizingFlexibleWidth        = 1 << 1,
   UIViewAutoresizingFlexibleRightMargin  = 1 << 2,
   UIViewAutoresizingFlexibleTopMargin    = 1 << 3,
   UIViewAutoresizingFlexibleHeight       = 1 << 4,
   UIViewAutoresizingFlexibleBottomMargin = 1 << 5
};
typedef NSUInteger UIViewAutoresizing;
share|improve this answer

Are you using IB to add the scroll view? Change the autosizing options of the scrollview to the attached image. alt text

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I am not using IB to add the UIScrollView. However, I think the size of the scroll view is correct. When I change the background color of my scroll view to purple, I can see that it always takes up the entire screen. – Sebastian Celis Apr 28 '09 at 14:21

Were you able to solve this problem? I'm stuck with a similar issue. I think the reason behind it is because the zoomScale applies to the whole contentSize, regardless of the actual size of the subview inside the scrollView (in your case it's an imageView). The contentSize height seems to be always equal or greater than the height of the scrollView frame, but never smaller. So when applying a zoom to it, the height of the contentSize gets multiplied by the zoomScale factor as well, that's why you're getting an extra 100-something pixels of vertical scroll.

share|improve this answer

You probably want to set the bounds of the scroll view = bounds of the image view, and then center the scroll view in its containing view. If you place a view inside a scroll view at an offset from the top, you will get that empty space above it.

share|improve this answer
Thanks, but that doesn't appear to make any difference. Calling [scrollView setBounds:[imageView bounds]]; still allows me to scroll up and down even when the image does not take up the entire vertical space of the screen. – Sebastian Celis Apr 28 '09 at 14:24

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