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I wish to create an animation. The best way I can explain this is if you can imagine drawing a circle. It starts at the top or 12 o clock and draws clockwise all the way around until it becomes a complete circle over the space of 10 or so seconds.

The closet I have come to this is to draw a point rotating around a center point using Core Animation (using the sample code here). But I am at a loss on how to draw the circle? Any suggestions are very welcome.

Many Thanks :)

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Are you trying to draw a circle sector where the angle increases until it becomes a complete circle (filled) or just drawing a curved line until it becomes a complete circle (just the outline, not filled)? – David Rönnqvist Nov 3 '11 at 13:56
@DavidRönnqvist im trying to draw a curved line until it becomes a complete circle, just the outline not filled :) – bennythemink Nov 3 '11 at 22:11

3 Answers

up vote 25 down vote accepted

What you really should do is to animate the stroke of a CAShapeLayer where the path is a circle. This will be accelerated using Core Animation and is less messy then to draw part of a circle in -drawRect:.

The code below will create a circle shape layer in the center of the screen and animate the stroke of it clockwise so that it looks as if it is being drawn. You can of course use any shape you'd like. (You can read this article on Ole Begemanns blog to learn more about how to animate the stroke of a shape layer.)

Note: that the stoke properties are not the same as the border properties on the layer. To change the width of the stroke you should use "lineWidth" instead of "borderWitdh" etc.

// Set up the shape of the circle
int radius = 100;
CAShapeLayer *circle = [CAShapeLayer layer];
// Make a circular shape
circle.path = [UIBezierPath bezierPathWithRoundedRect:CGRectMake(0, 0, 2.0*radius, 2.0*radius) 
                                         cornerRadius:radius].CGPath;
// Center the shape in self.view
circle.position = CGPointMake(CGRectGetMidX(self.view.frame)-radius, 
                              CGRectGetMidY(self.view.frame)-radius);

// Configure the apperence of the circle
circle.fillColor = [UIColor clearColor].CGColor;
circle.strokeColor = [UIColor blackColor].CGColor;
circle.lineWidth = 5;

// Add to parent layer
[self.view.layer addSublayer:circle];

// Configure animation
CABasicAnimation *drawAnimation = [CABasicAnimation animationWithKeyPath:@"strokeEnd"];
drawAnimation.duration            = 10.0; // "animate over 10 seconds or so.."
drawAnimation.repeatCount         = 1.0;  // Animate only once..
drawAnimation.removedOnCompletion = NO;   // Remain stroked after the animation..

// Animate from no part of the stroke being drawn to the entire stroke being drawn
drawAnimation.fromValue = [NSNumber numberWithFloat:0.0f];
drawAnimation.toValue   = [NSNumber numberWithFloat:1.0f];

// Experiment with timing to get the appearence to look the way you want
drawAnimation.timingFunction = [CAMediaTimingFunction functionWithName:kCAMediaTimingFunctionEaseIn];

// Add the animation to the circle
[circle addAnimation:drawAnimation forKey:@"drawCircleAnimation"];
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Thanks David for this great peace of code! I have question: How do you animate filling of entire circle, and not just curved line? (the first thing you asked bennythemink in comment on his question) – uerceg Nov 8 '12 at 14:49
1  
You could actually do the same thing but with a very wide line like in this answer. You would animate strokeEnd just the same. – David Rönnqvist Nov 8 '12 at 15:36
David, thank you. I was thinking of the same thing, basically just to increase line width until full circle, just thought if there's some other way, since I was looking for some animations which animate directly circle fill, not stroke, but I wasn't able to find them. – uerceg Nov 9 '12 at 7:26
There are other ways. You could create a custom layer and animate it. Have a look at this great tutorial for animating pie slices with a custom CALayer – David Rönnqvist Nov 9 '12 at 8:30
1  
You would have to draw a full gradient in a separate layer and use the animated circle as a mask. When you animate the fill of the circle mask, the gradient will be become visible. – David Rönnqvist Nov 9 '12 at 13:11
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I got a solution to this problem, code below. I seem to have messed up in my explanation of the problem at hand so rewrote it as another question that got answered with the correct solution, see here

thanks everyone for their advice!

    - (void)drawRect:(CGRect)rect
{
// Drawing code

CGRect allRect = self.bounds;
CGContextRef context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();

// Draw background
CGContextSetRGBStrokeColor(context, self.strokeValueRed, self.strokeValueGreen, self.strokeValueBlue, self.strokeValueAlpha); // white
CGContextSetLineWidth(context, 5);

// Draw progress
CGPoint center = CGPointMake(allRect.size.width / 2, allRect.size.height / 2);
CGFloat radius = (allRect.size.width - 4) / 2;
CGFloat startAngle = - ((float)M_PI / 2); // 90 degrees
CGFloat endAngle = (self.progress * 2 * (float)M_PI) + startAngle;
CGContextAddArc(context, center.x, center.y, radius, startAngle, endAngle, 0);
CGContextStrokePath(context);
}
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Ok I have a partial fix. I found the following code that draws segments of a circle. Its basically a UIView subclass that gets its drawRect fired every time its progress should be updated. The only question I have now is how would I change it so that instead of drawing sections or slices it would just draw the circle stroke?

- (void)drawRect:(CGRect)rect {
// Drawing code

CGRect allRect = self.bounds;
CGRect circleRect = CGRectInset(allRect, 2.0f, 2.0f);

CGContextRef context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();

// Draw background
CGContextSetRGBStrokeColor(context, self.strokeValueRed, self.strokeValueGreen, self.strokeValueBlue, self.strokeValueAlpha); // white
CGContextSetRGBFillColor(context, 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f, 0.1f); // translucent white
CGContextSetLineWidth(context, self.lineWidth);
CGContextFillEllipseInRect(context, circleRect);
CGContextStrokeEllipseInRect(context, circleRect);

// Draw progress
CGPoint center = CGPointMake(allRect.size.width / 2, allRect.size.height / 2);
CGFloat radius = (allRect.size.width - 4) / 2;
CGFloat startAngle = - ((float)M_PI / 2); // 90 degrees
CGFloat endAngle = (self.progress * 2 * (float)M_PI) + startAngle;
CGContextSetRGBFillColor(context, 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f); // white
CGContextMoveToPoint(context, center.x, center.y);
CGContextAddArc(context, center.x, center.y, radius, startAngle, endAngle, 0);
CGContextClosePath(context);
CGContextFillPath(context);
}
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