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@mecid
Last active August 15, 2024 06:38
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PagerView in SwiftUI
//
// PagerView.swift
//
// Created by Majid Jabrayilov on 12/5/19.
// Copyright © 2019 Majid Jabrayilov. All rights reserved.
//
import SwiftUI
struct PagerView<Content: View>: View {
let pageCount: Int
@Binding var currentIndex: Int
let content: Content
@GestureState private var translation: CGFloat = 0
init(pageCount: Int, currentIndex: Binding<Int>, @ViewBuilder content: () -> Content) {
self.pageCount = pageCount
self._currentIndex = currentIndex
self.content = content()
}
var body: some View {
GeometryReader { geometry in
HStack(spacing: 0) {
self.content.frame(width: geometry.size.width)
}
.frame(width: geometry.size.width, alignment: .leading)
.offset(x: -CGFloat(self.currentIndex) * geometry.size.width)
.offset(x: self.translation)
.animation(.interactiveSpring())
.gesture(
DragGesture().updating(self.$translation) { value, state, _ in
state = value.translation.width
}.onEnded { value in
let offset = value.translation.width / geometry.size.width
let newIndex = (CGFloat(self.currentIndex) - offset).rounded()
self.currentIndex = min(max(Int(newIndex), 0), self.pageCount - 1)
}
)
}
}
}
@gesabo
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gesabo commented Mar 8, 2021

@d03090 I tried using your solution and it works well and is smooth, however when I embed it in a scrollview the scroll disabled or broken. Any idea how to enable scrolling?

@wtpalexander
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Have made my own adjustment to the original to get drag gestures working just like the original PageTabViewStyle. Also uses the predicted swipe end that @d03090 implements and also limits the scroll to one page at a time. FYI @gesabo - This implementation works with a nested ScrollView. Tested on Xcode 12.4, iOS 14.4. Thank you @mecid for the original code!
https://gist.github.com/wtpalexander/565ccf7bb092734dbf2c584dd639fb46

@gesabo
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gesabo commented Mar 10, 2021

@wtpalexander thanks for that, unfortunately it still doesn't solve my UI. My view hierarchy is like this: Master View that has the PagerView as a Child, and the PagerView has 3 subviews that need to be able to be scrolled vertically. Ideally I would like the Master View to have a ScrollView so that when the subviews content is scrolled, the Large Title in the Navigation Bar become small. The problem is when I add a ScrollView to Master View, it seems as though PagerView prevents the vertical scrolling and won't let me fully scroll.

@wtpalexander
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@gesabo Apologies - I miss understood your requirements! So you'd like a scroll view that snaps to each page, but when scrolled to the second or third nested view, the NavBar changes from LargeTitle to Inline?

@gesabo
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gesabo commented Mar 11, 2021

@wtpalexander yes it seems that if the PagerView is embedded in a ScrollView then the sub views of the PagerView are not scrollable. Again my view hierarchy is Master View -> PagerView -> Subviews. For now I have the subviews having ScrollViews, which works to scroll vertically to see their content, however the large title the nav bar doesn't change to inline. Ideally I would like to remove the ScrollView from the subviews and place it in the MasterView so I can get this functionality where the large title changes to inline.

@shaps80
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shaps80 commented Jun 28, 2021

@mecid / @d03090 / @gesabo
Just my two cents, as often as possible I prefer to use the real-thing given Apple usually does a far more complete implementation for other things like accessibility. In addition, the animations and gesture implementations are more consistent across iOS versions. In that vein, I've created an implementation that just wraps TabView and provides auto-sizing based on the content (height).

Since it wraps TabView the API is identical and it behaves exactly as expected. Feel free to grab it here if it works for your needs:
https://gist.github.com/shaps80/65d9d58480469bfe8eff6542f1dd16c4

@wtpalexander I tried your solution but I found the gestures to be very 'sticky' and difficult to work with, maybe this works for you too? 👍

@cecipirotto
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My team recently delivered PagerTabStripView, a new Open Source for Pager Tab views. This is the GitHub repo. You can read an introduction in this post.
Here is an example gif!
enter image description here

We'll appreciate it if you can take a look! If you like the library, want to contribute to the project, or need some help using it, please reach out to us, open an issue or a pull request.

@sinnuswong
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sinnuswong commented Apr 19, 2022

This will more smoothly

import Foundation
import SwiftUI

struct PagerView<Content: View>: View {
    let pageCount: Int
    @State var ignore: Bool = false
    @Binding var currentIndex: Int {
        didSet {
            if (!ignore) {
                currentFloatIndex = CGFloat(currentIndex)
            }
        }
    }
    @State var currentFloatIndex: CGFloat = 0 {
        didSet {
            ignore = true
            currentIndex = min(max(Int(currentFloatIndex.rounded()), 0), self.pageCount - 1)
            ignore = false
        }
    }
    let content: Content

    @GestureState private var offsetX: CGFloat = 0

    init(pageCount: Int, currentIndex: Binding<Int>, @ViewBuilder content: () -> Content) {
        self.pageCount = pageCount
        self._currentIndex = currentIndex
        self.content = content()
    }

    var body: some View {
        GeometryReader { geometry in
            HStack(spacing: 0) {
                self.content.frame(width: geometry.size.width)
            }
            .frame(width: geometry.size.width, alignment: .leading)
            .offset(x: -CGFloat(self.currentFloatIndex) * geometry.size.width)
            .offset(x: self.offsetX)
            .animation(.linear, value:offsetX)
            .highPriorityGesture(
                DragGesture().updating(self.$offsetX) { value, state, _ in
                    state = value.translation.width
                }
                .onEnded({ (value) in
                    let offset = value.translation.width / geometry.size.width
                    let offsetPredicted = value.predictedEndTranslation.width / geometry.size.width
                    let newIndex = CGFloat(self.currentFloatIndex) - offset
                    
                    self.currentFloatIndex = newIndex
                    
                    withAnimation(.easeOut) {
                        if(offsetPredicted < -0.5 && offset > -0.5) {
                            self.currentFloatIndex = CGFloat(min(max(Int(newIndex.rounded() + 1), 0), self.pageCount - 1))
                        } else if (offsetPredicted > 0.5 && offset < 0.5) {
                            self.currentFloatIndex = CGFloat(min(max(Int(newIndex.rounded() - 1), 0), self.pageCount - 1))
                        } else {
                            self.currentFloatIndex = CGFloat(min(max(Int(newIndex.rounded()), 0), self.pageCount - 1))
                        }
                    }
                })
            )
        }
        .onChange(of: currentIndex, perform: { value in
            print("index changed")
            
            // this is probably animated twice, if the tab change occurs because of the drag gesture
            withAnimation(.easeOut) {
                currentFloatIndex = CGFloat(value)
            }
        })
    }
}

@samilao101
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Is there any way to load the views lazily?

@mecid
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mecid commented May 5, 2022

@samilao101 did you try to use LazyHStack instead of HStack?

@samilao101
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@mecid I did, but the issue is that in order for a lazyhstack to become lazy it needs to be imbedded in a scrollview, and if you do that, you essentially lose the pagination feature.

@mecid
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mecid commented May 5, 2022

@samilao101 oh, you're right. Maybe TabView with Page style will work for you better?

@pjcau
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pjcau commented May 30, 2022

So isn't the lazy this approach....Load all contents and onAppear

@samilao101
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@pjcau sorry I am not sure I understand what you mean

@pjcau
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pjcau commented May 30, 2022

@pjcau sorry I am not sure I understand what you mean

IN this way, if you want load a array of DetalView for example, so load in one step all init and onAppear(). So it's not good. But fix it with TabView with Page style.

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ghost commented Sep 27, 2022

@pjcau did you manage to integrate ScrollView in order to achieve lazy loading?

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