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问题:
I want to know how to simply mask the visible area of a UIView of any kind. All the answers/tutorials I've read so far describe masking with an image, gradient or creating round corners which is way more advanced than what I am after.
Example: I have a UIView with the bounds (0, 0, 100, 100) and I want to cut away the right half of the view using a mask. Therefore my mask frame would be (0, 0, 50, 100).
Any idea how to do this simply? I don't want to override the drawrect method since this should be applicable to any UIView.
I've tried this but it just makes the whole view invisible.
CGRect mask = CGRectMake(0, 0, 50, 100);
UIView *maskView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:mask];
viewToMask.layer.mask = maskView.layer;
回答1:
Thanks to the link from MSK, this is the way I went with which works well:
// Create a mask layer and the frame to determine what will be visible in the view.
CAShapeLayer *maskLayer = [[CAShapeLayer alloc] init];
CGRect maskRect = CGRectMake(0, 0, 50, 100);
// Create a path with the rectangle in it.
CGPathRef path = CGPathCreateWithRect(maskRect, NULL);
// Set the path to the mask layer.
maskLayer.path = path;
// Release the path since it's not covered by ARC.
CGPathRelease(path);
// Set the mask of the view.
viewToMask.layer.mask = maskLayer;
回答2:
No need any mask at all.
Just put it into a wrapper view with the smaller frame, and set clipsToBounds.
wrapper.clipsToBounds = YES;
回答3:
Thanks for answers guys.
In case someone can't find suitable answer on SO for this question for hours, like i just did, i've assembled a working gist in Swift 2.2 for masking
/clipping
UIView
with CGRect
/UIBezierPath
:
https://gist.github.com/Flar49/7e977e81f1d2827f5fcd5c6c6a3c3d94
extension UIView {
func mask(withRect rect: CGRect, inverse: Bool = false) {
let path = UIBezierPath(rect: rect)
let maskLayer = CAShapeLayer()
if inverse {
path.append(UIBezierPath(rect: self.bounds))
maskLayer.fillRule = kCAFillRuleEvenOdd
}
maskLayer.path = path.cgPath
self.layer.mask = maskLayer
}
func mask(withPath path: UIBezierPath, inverse: Bool = false) {
let path = path
let maskLayer = CAShapeLayer()
if inverse {
path.append(UIBezierPath(rect: self.bounds))
maskLayer.fillRule = kCAFillRuleEvenOdd
}
maskLayer.path = path.cgPath
self.layer.mask = maskLayer
}
}
Usage:
let viewSize = targetView.bounds.size
let rect = CGRect(x: 20, y: 20, width: viewSize.width - 20*2, height: viewSize.height - 20*2)
// Cuts rectangle inside view, leaving 20pt borders around
targetView.mask(withRect: rect, inverse: true)
// Cuts 20pt borders around the view, keeping part inside rect intact
targetView.mask(withRect: rect)
Hope it will save someone some time in the future :)
回答4:
An optional layer whose alpha channel is used as a mask to select
between the layer's background and the result of compositing the
layer's contents with its filtered background.
@property(retain) CALayer *mask
The correct way to do what you want is to create the maskView
of the same frame (0, 0, 100, 100) as the viewToMask
which layer you want to mask. Then you need to set the clearColor for the path you want to make invisible (this will block the view interaction over the path so be careful with the view hierarchy).
回答5:
Very simple example in a Swift ViewController, based on the accepted answer:
import UIKit
class ViewController: UIViewController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
let redView = UIView(frame: view.bounds)
view.addSubview(redView)
view.backgroundColor = UIColor.greenColor()
redView.backgroundColor = UIColor.redColor()
mask(redView, maskRect: CGRect(x: 50, y: 50, width: 50, height: 50))
}
func mask(viewToMask: UIView, maskRect: CGRect) {
let maskLayer = CAShapeLayer()
let path = CGPathCreateWithRect(maskRect, nil)
maskLayer.path = path
// Set the mask of the view.
viewToMask.layer.mask = maskLayer;
}
}
Output
回答6:
Setting MaskToBounds
is not enough, for example, in scenario where you have UIImageView
that is positioned inside RelativeLayout
. In case that you put your UIImageView
to be near top edge of the layout and then you rotate your UIImageView
, it will go over layout and it won't be cropped. If you set that flag to true, it will be cropped yes, but it will also be cropped if UIImageView
is on the center of layout, and that is not what you want.
So, determinating maskRect
is the right approach.