Skip to content

A simple iOS photo browser with optional grid view, captions and selections.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

Wikimapia/MWPhotoBrowser

 
 

Repository files navigation

MWPhotoBrowser

Flattr this git repo

A simple iOS photo browser. Supports edit options per photo.

This fork removed orginal photo grid, but adds editing options.

MWPhotoBrowser can display one or more images by providing either UIImage objects, or URLs to files, web images or library assets. The photo browser handles the downloading and caching of photos from the web seamlessly. Photos can be zoomed and panned, and optional (customisable) captions can be displayed.

The browser can also be used to allow the user to select one or more photos using either the grid or main image view.

Alt    Alt   Alt

Works on iOS 6.0+. All strings are localisable so they can be used in apps that support multiple languages.

Usage

MWPhotoBrowser is designed to be presented within a navigation controller. Simply set the delegate (which must conform to MWPhotoBrowserDelegate) and implement the 2 required delegate methods to provide the photo browser with the data in the form of MWPhoto objects. You can create an MWPhoto object by providing a UIImage object, or a URL containing the path to a file, an image online or an asset from the asset library.

MWPhoto objects handle caching, file management, downloading of web images, and various optimisations for you. If however you would like to use your own data model to represent photos you can simply ensure your model conforms to the MWPhoto protocol. You can then handle the management of caching, downloads, etc, yourself. More information on this can be found in MWPhotoProtocol.h.

See the code snippet below for an example of how to implement the photo browser. There is also a simple demo app within the project.

// Create array of MWPhoto objects
self.photos = [NSMutableArray array];
[photos addObject:[MWPhoto photoWithURL:[NSURL fileURLWithPath:[[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"photo2l" ofType:@"jpg"]]]];
[photos addObject:[MWPhoto photoWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3629/3339128908_7aecabc34b.jpg"]]];
[photos addObject:[MWPhoto photoWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3590/3329114220_5fbc5bc92b.jpg"]]];

// Create browser (must be done each time photo browser is
// displayed. Photo browser objects cannot be re-used)
MWPhotoBrowser *browser = [[MWPhotoBrowser alloc] initWithDelegate:self];

// Set options
browser.displayActionButton = YES; // Show action button to allow sharing, copying, etc (defaults to YES)
browser.displayNavArrows = NO; // Whether to display left and right nav arrows on toolbar (defaults to NO)
browser.displaySelectionButtons = NO; // Whether selection buttons are shown on each image (defaults to NO)
browser.zoomPhotosToFill = YES; // Images that almost fill the screen will be initially zoomed to fill (defaults to YES)
browser.alwaysShowControls = NO; // Allows to control whether the bars and controls are always visible or whether they fade away to show the photo full (defaults to NO)
browser.wantsFullScreenLayout = YES; // iOS 5 & 6 only: Decide if you want the photo browser full screen, i.e. whether the status bar is affected (defaults to YES)

// Optionally set the current visible photo before displaying
[browser setCurrentPhotoIndex:1];

// Present
[self.navigationController pushViewController:browser animated:YES];

// Manipulate
[browser showNextPhotoAnimated:YES];
[browser showPreviousPhotoAnimated:YES];
[browser setCurrentPhotoIndex:10];

Then respond to the required delegate methods:

- (NSUInteger)numberOfPhotosInPhotoBrowser:(MWPhotoBrowser *)photoBrowser {
    return self.photos.count;
}

- (id <MWPhoto>)photoBrowser:(MWPhotoBrowser *)photoBrowser photoAtIndex:(NSUInteger)index {
    if (index < self.photos.count)
        return [self.photos objectAtIndex:index];
    return nil;
}

You can present the browser modally simply by wrapping it in a new navigation controller and presenting that. The demo app allows you to toggle between the two presentation types.

If using iOS 6 and you don't want to view the photo browser full screen (for example if you are using view controller containment) then set the photo browser's wantsFullScreenLayout property to NO. This will mean the status bar will not be affected by the photo browser.

Actions

By default, if the action button is visible then the image (and caption if it exists) are sent to a UIActivityViewController. On iOS 5, a custom action sheet appears allowing them to copy or email the photo.

You can provide a custom action by implementing the following delegate method:

- (void)photoBrowser:(MWPhotoBrowser *)photoBrowser actionButtonPressedForPhotoAtIndex:(NSUInteger)index {
    // Do your thing!
}

Photo Captions

Photo captions can be displayed simply by setting the caption property on specific photos:

MWPhoto *photo = [MWPhoto photoWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3629/3339128908_7aecabc34b.jpg"]];
photo.caption = @"Campervan";

No caption will be displayed if the caption property is not set.

Custom Captions

By default, the caption is a simple black transparent view with a label displaying the photo's caption in white. If you want to implement your own caption view, follow these steps:

  1. Optionally use a subclass of MWPhoto for your photos so you can store more data than a simple caption string.
  2. Subclass MWCaptionView and override -setupCaption and -sizeThatFits: (and any other UIView methods you see fit) to layout your own view and set it's size. More information on this can be found in MWCaptionView.h
  3. Implement the -photoBrowser:captionViewForPhotoAtIndex: MWPhotoBrowser delegate method (shown below).

Example delegate method for custom caption view:

- (MWCaptionView *)photoBrowser:(MWPhotoBrowser *)photoBrowser captionViewForPhotoAtIndex:(NSUInteger)index {
    MWPhoto *photo = [self.photos objectAtIndex:index];
    MyMWCaptionViewSubclass *captionView = [[MyMWCaptionViewSubclass alloc] initWithPhoto:photo];
    return captionView;
}

Adding to your project

Method 1: Use CocoaPods

CocoaPods is great. If you are using CocoaPods (and here's how to get started), simply add pod 'MWPhotoBrowser' to your podfile and run pod install. You're good to go! Here's an example podfile:

platform :ios, '7'
    pod 'MWPhotoBrowser', :git => 'https://github.com/Wikimapia/MWPhotoBrowser.git'

Method 2: Static Library

  1. Get the latest source from GitHub by either downloading as a zip file or by cloning the repository at git://github.com/Wikimapia/MWPhotoBrowser.git and store the code wherever you wish.
  2. Right-click on the your project in the navigator, click "Add Files to 'Your Project'", and browse to and select "MWPhotoBrowser.xcodeproj"
  3. In your project's target settings, go to "Build Phases" -> "Link Binary With Libraries" and add libMWPhotoBrowser.a.
  4. Still in "Build Phases", drop down "Copy Bundle Resources" and drag the file MWPhotoBrowser.bundle from the MWPhotoBrowser project into that list. This ensures your project will include the required graphics for the photo browser to work correctly.
  5. In the target, select the "Build Settings" tab and ensure "Always Search User Paths" is set to YES, and "User Header Search Paths" is set to the recursive absolute or relative path that points to a directory under which the MWPhotoBrowser code is stored. In the file layout of the MWPhotoBrowser project, a simple ../** works as the demo project folder and MWPhotoBrowser project folder are adjacent to one another. Please let me know if you encounter any issue with this.
  6. Under "Build Phases / Link Binary With Libraries" add MessageUI.framework, QuartzCore.framework, AssetsLibrary.framework and ImageIO.framework to "Linked Frameworks and Libraries".

You should now be able to include MWPhotoBrowser.h into your project and start using it.

Setting these things up in Xcode can be a bit tricky so if you run into any problems you may wish to read through a few bits of information:

Method 3: Including Source Directly Into Your Project

Another method is to simply add the files to your Xcode project, copying them to your project's directory if required. Ensure that all the code within MWPhotoBrowser/Classes, MWPhotoBrowser/Libraries and the MWPhotoBrowser.bundle is included in your project.

Notes and Accreditation

MWPhotoBrowser very gratefully makes use of these other fantastic open source projects:

  • SDWebImage by Olivier Poitrey — Used to handle downloading and decompressing of photos from the web.
  • MBProgressHUD by Jonathan George — Used to display activity notifications.

Demo photos kindly provided by Oliver Waters (http://twitter.com/oliverwaters).

Licence

Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Michael Waterfall

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

About

A simple iOS photo browser with optional grid view, captions and selections.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Objective-C 99.5%
  • Ruby 0.5%