20

I know you have to use this method to get the delegate method for when the animation has finished:

- (void)animationDidStop:(CAAnimation *)theAnimation finished:(BOOL)flag {

The problem is, how would I distinguish between multiple CAAnimations like 2 or more?

I googled this and I haven't found anything useful.

Please share with me on how you accomplished this!

Thanks!

2 Answers 2

50

You can set key/value objects for CAAnimation instance like this:

CABasicAnimation *theAnimation = [CABasicAnimation animationWithKeyPath:@"opacity"];
[theAnimation setValue:@"animation1" forKey:@"id"]; 
theAnimation.delegate = self;

CABasicAnimation *theAnimation2 = [CABasicAnimation animationWithKeyPath:@"opacity"];
[theAnimation2 setValue:@"animation2" forKey:@"id"];    
theAnimation2.delegate = self;

Check which one was called in delegate method:

- (void)animationDidStop:(CAAnimation *)anim finished:(BOOL)flag{
    if([[anim valueForKey:@"id"] isEqual:@"animation1"]) {
        NSLog(@"animation1");
    }
    if([[anim valueForKey:@"id"] isEqual:@"animation2"]) {
        NSLog(@"animation2");
    }
}
5
  • i'm surprised & bummed you can't just do an if (anim == theAnimation) { ... } - it would be great for error catching and auto-complete, etc. anyone know why you CANNOT do that? the anim value does appear to be set and saved in memory when I NSLog it..
    – toblerpwn
    Jul 13, 2012 at 20:01
  • theAnimation is declared as local, you can't access it in animationDidStop. If you declare it as global, then question will be a quite poor since you can access that ivar anywhere
    – beryllium
    Jul 23, 2012 at 8:16
  • 3
    @toblerpwn when you add an animation to a layer, that animation is copied to that layer instead of being referenced directly. that's why you can not use == operator on animations.
    – akaralar
    Jun 20, 2014 at 12:51
  • Be aware that CAAnimation's delegate is strong, so you might need to set it to nil to avoid retain cycles! Aug 10, 2016 at 12:34
  • [theAnimation2 setValue:@"animation2" forKey:@"id"] does not work!!!! And the CABasicAnimation object changed like @akaralar said. Why this is right answer? Nov 15, 2016 at 12:24
1

A CAAnimation object is supposed to be reused from time to time and that's why I don't like to give it a certain key (since it's not unique). What makes it unique is the association with a CALayer with addAnimation:forKey:. For this reason I use the following code in animationDidStop:

if animation == layer.animationForKey(AnimationKeys.scaleUp) {
   // scaleUp animation has completed
}
1
  • 1
    This will only work if you set "animation.isRemovedOnCompletion = false", otherwise the animation is removed from the layer as soon as it finish and you'll never enter in the if statement. Jul 25, 2017 at 7:43

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