写在前边的话
这篇文章最开始是用来方便自己在查阅时用的,之前做项目的时候用过这个抽屉效果,感觉还不错,基本满足了项目的需求,所以发了这样一篇文章,基本上是将github上作者的原文搬了过来。随着简书用户的增多,很多朋友在搜索抽屉效果的时候,不幸搜到了这篇文章,也基本上没解决什么问题,在下边给我留言有的还加我好友一块儿探讨,感谢这么多一起奋斗的小伙伴,最后还是写了一个Demo来阐述了大伙儿问我最多的几个问题:
1.如何在某个页面关闭抽屉效果;2.如何在左侧或者右侧点击某个按钮或者列表的某一项关闭抽屉;3.如何将一侧的数据传递到主页面去。
我这次更新的内容也主要是解决前两个,针对第三个问题我觉得数据传递在APP开发过程中会有很多方式,无论用数据存储,单例,消息通知,还是NSUserDefaults都可以达到你想要的效果。下面直接贴代码了
功能说明:1.点击主页面跳转按钮到详情页 该页面将禁止左右抽屉的打开 2.点击左侧的列表会将抽屉关闭 具体的代码实现可以在我的github和分享的云盘链接上进行下载
Hithub地址: https://github.com/hanqiao8866/MMDrawerDemo
百度云盘地址: http://pan.baidu.com/s/1jIEpG7W
有问题可以随时找我交流 也希望共同进步
Mutual Mobile Drawer Controller
https://github.com/mutualmobile/MMDrawerController
MMDrawerControlleris a side drawer navigation container view controller designed to support the growing number of applications that leverage the side drawer paradigm. This library is designed to exclusively support side drawer navigation in a light-weight, focused approach while exposing the ability to provide custom animations for presenting and dismissing the drawer.
Documentation
Official appledoc documentation can be found atCocoaDocs.
Installing MMDrawerController
You can install MMDrawerController in your project by usingCocoaPods:
pod'MMDrawerController','~> 0.5.7'
Creating a Drawer Controller
Creating aMMDrawerControlleris as easy as creating a center view controller and the drawer view controllers, and init'ing the drawer.
Features
UINavigationController Support
MMDrawerControllerseamlessly accepts aUINavigationControlleras thecenterViewController, and will update all of the gesture support automatically. In addition, any child view controller contained within theUINavigationControllerwill have access to the parent drawer controller using the category explainedbelow.
MMDrawerControllerexposes gesture support for opening and closing the drawer through two masks, one for opening and one for closing. The options are as follows:
MMOpenDrawerGestureMode
MMOpenDrawerGestureModePanningNavigationBar: The user can open the drawer by panning anywhere on the navigation bar.
MMOpenDrawerGestureModePanningCenterView: The user can open the drawer by panning anywhere on the center view.
MMOpenDrawerGestureModeBezelPanningCenterView: The user can open the drawer by starting a pan anywhere within 20 points of the bezel.
MMOpenDrawerGestureModeCustom: The developer can provide a callback block to determine if the gesture should be recognized. More information below.
MMCloseDrawerGestureMode
MMCloseDrawerGestureModePanningNavigationBar: The user can close the drawer by panning anywhere on the navigation bar.
MMCloseDrawerGestureModePanningCenterView: The user can close the drawer by panning anywhere on the center view.
MMCloseDrawerGestureModeBezelPanningCenterView: The user can close the drawer by starting a pan anywhere within the bezel of the center view.
MMCloseDrawerGestureModeTapNavigationBar: The user can close the drawer by tapping the navigation bar.
MMCloseDrawerGestureModeTapCenterView: The user can close the drawer by tapping the center view.
MMCloseDrawerGestureModePanningDrawerView: The user can close the drawer by panning anywhere on the drawer view.
MMCloseDrawerGestureModeCustom: The developer can provide a callback block to determine if the gesture should be recognized. More information below.
You are free to set whatever combination you want for opening and closing. Note that these gestures may impact touches sent to the child view controllers, so be sure to use these appropriately for your application. For example, you wouldn't wantMMOpenDrawerGestureModePanningCenterViewset if aMKMapViewis your center view controller, since it would intercept the pan meant for moving around the map.
Custom Gesture Recognizer Support
Starting with version 0.3.0, you can now provide a callback block to determine if a gesture should be recognized using thesetGestureShouldRecognizeTouchBlock:method. This method provides three parameters - the drawer controller, the gesture, and the touch. As a developer, you are responsible for inspecting those elements and determining if the gesture should be recognized or not. Note the block is only consulted if you have setMMOpenDrawerGestureModeCustom/MMCloseDrawerGestureModeCustomon the appropriate mask.
For example, lets say you have a center view controller that contains a few elements, and you only want the pan gesture to be recognized to open the drawer when the touch begins within a certain subview. You would make sure that theopenDrawerGestureModeMaskcontainsMMOpenDrawerGestureModeCustom, and you could set a block below as so:
In addition,MMDrawerControllerships with several prebuilt animations to let you go crazy right out of the box. These are included as a subspec for the project, and more information can be foundbelow.
Center View Controller Interaction Mode
When a drawer is open, you can control how a user can interact with the center view controller.
MMDrawerOpenCenterInteractionModeNone: The user can not interact with any content in the center view.
MMDrawerOpenCenterInteractionModeFull: The user can interact with all content in the center view.
MMDrawerOpenCenterInteractionModeNavigationBarOnly: The user can interact with only content on the navigation bar. The setting allows the menu button to still respond, allowing you to toggle the drawer closed when it is open. This is the default setting.
Accessing the Drawer Controller from a Child View Controller
You can use theUIViewController+MMDrawerControllercategory in order to query the drawerController directly from child view controllers.
Beginning with 0.4.0,MMDrawerControllersupports iOS state restoration. In order to opt in to state restoration forMMDrawerController, you must set therestorationIdentifierof your drawer controller. Instances of yourcenterViewController,leftDrawerViewControllerandrightDrawerViewControllermust also be configured with their ownrestorationIdentifier(and optionally a restorationClass) if you intend for those to be restored as well. If your MMDrawerController had an open drawer when your app was sent to the background, that state will also be restored.
Beginning with iOS 7, the child view controllers will by default determine the state of the status bar, including its' style and whether or not it is hidden. This value will also be updated anytime the open side changes state, meaning that a side drawer can provide a different value than the center view controller.
If you do not want the drawer controller to consult the child view controllers for this state, you should subclassMMDrawerController, overridechildViewControllerForStatusBarStyleandchildViewControllerForStatusBarHidden, and return nil for both.
Custom Status Bar Background View
If you have a contrasting colors between your center view controller and your drawer controllers, the new iOS 7 status bar handling could cause your application to look less than ideal. Starting with iOS 7,MMDrawerControllersupports drawing a custom status bar area at the top of the screen, to give you an area to display the status bar with a constant color, while allowing you to draw custom content below the status bar without worrying about the color of your navigation bars or the top of your content running up underneath the status bar. Using the feature essentially mimics <= iOS 6.X behavior.
To enable a custom status bar, simple setshowsStatusBarBackgroundViewtoYES. By default, this will draw a black a view underneath the status bar, and adjust your to content to be laid out lower than the status bar. If you would like a custom status background color, you can setstatusBarViewBackgroundColorto whatever color you desire.
If you plan to subclassMMDrawerController, importMMDrawerController+Subclass.hinto your subclass to access protected methods forMMDrawerController.Note that several methods assume and require you to call super, so be sure to follow that convention.
If there is specific functionality you need that is not supported by these methods, please open a Github issue explaining your needs and we can try and find a way to open up methods that can help you out.
A few extras to make your life easier...
Using Paint Code, we created a standard Menu Button that you can use in anyUINavigationBar, and make it whatever color you want. It's included as a subspec to this library. Enjoy.
Starting with iOS 7, the drawer button is now drawn in a much thinner stroke. In addition, the color methods have been deprecated, and the color will now be determined by thetintColor.Also note that the shadow has been deprecated to be more in line with the design themes of the OS.
In order to make it as easy as possible for you to use this library, we built some of the common animations we see out there today. Simply include theMMDrawerVisualStatessubspec, and use any of the prebuilt visual states.
For example, if you wanted to use a slide and scale animation, you would do the following:
And that's it...
Here's a quick list of the built in animations:
Slide: The drawer slides at the same rate as the center view controller.
Slide and Scale: The drawer slides and scales up at the same time, while also alpha'ing from 0.0 to 1.0.
Swinging Door: The drawer swings in along a hinge on the center view controller.
Parallax: The drawer slides in at a slower rate than the center view controller, giving a parallax effect.
By default, the side drawer will stretch if the user pans past the maximum drawer width. This gives a playful stretch effect. You can disable this by settingshouldStretchDrawerto NO, or you can make your own overshoot animation by creating a custom visual state block and setting up custom transforms for when percentVisible is greater than 1.0
To make your side drawer more discoverable, it may be helpful to bounce the drawer the first time your user launches the app. You can use thebouncePreviewForDrawerSide:completion:method to easily do this.
If you would like to bounce a custom distance, you can usebouncePreviewForDrawerSide:distance:completion:.
We decided to spruce up the example a bit using graphics generated from PaintCode. Hope you like it.
The example shows off all the features of the library. Give it a whirl.
In order to keep this library light-weight, we had to make some design trade off decisions. Specifically, we decided this library would NOT DO the following:
Top or bottom drawer views
Displaying both drawers at one time
Displaying a minimum drawer width
Support container view controllers other thanUINavigationController(such asUITabBarControllerorUISplitViewController) as the center view controller.
Support presenting the drawer above the center view controller (like the Google+ app).
We're sure this list will grow over time. But that's the cost of keeping something maintainable :)
How do I support editing/dragging cells in a tableview in the center view controller?
The best way to support this is to set the open/close mask toMMOpenDrawerGestureModeNone/MMCloseDrawerGestureModeNonewhile editing is enabled, and restore the mask when editing is finished. This will allow the proper gestures/touches to be passed all the way to the table view. (#184)
Designed and Developed by these fine folks atMutual Mobile:
We'd love to hear feedback on the library. Create Github issues, or hit us up on Twitter.
MMDrawerControlleris available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.