Popup Dialog is a simple, customizable popup dialog written in Swift.
- Easy to use API with hardly any boilerplate code
- Convenient default view with image, title, message
- Supports custom view controllers
- Slick transition animations
- Fully themeable via appearance, including fonts, colors, corner radius, shadow, overlay color and blur, etc.
- Can be dismissed via swipe and background tap
- Objective-C compatible
- Works on all screens and devices supporting iOS 8.0+
PopupDialog is available through CocoaPods. To install it, simply add the following to your Podfile:
use_frameworks!
target '<Your Target Name>'
pod 'PopupDialog', '~> 0.4'
If you are looking for a Swift 3 version of PopupDialog, specify the following branch in your podfile:
pod 'PopupDialog', :git => 'https://github.com/Orderella/PopupDialog.git', :branch => 'Swift3'
Please not the the Swift3 branch might not be up to date until release.
Carthage is a decentralized dependency manager that builds your dependencies and provides you with binary frameworks.
To install, simply add the following lines to your Cartfile:
github "Orderella/PopupDialog" ~> 0.4
github "tomvanzummeren/TZStackView" ~> 1.2.0
If you prefer not to use either of the above mentioned dependency managers, you can integrate PopupDialog into your project manually by adding the files contained in the Classes folder to your project.
You can find this and more example projects in the repo. To run it, clone the repo, and run pod install
from the Example directory first.
import PopupDialog
// Prepare the popup assets
let title = "THIS IS THE DIALOG TITLE"
let message = "This is the message section of the popup dialog default view"
let image = UIImage(named: "pexels-photo-103290")
// Create the dialog
let popup = PopupDialog(title: title, message: message, image: image)
// Create buttons
let buttonOne = CancelButton(title: "CANCEL") {
print("You canceled the car dialog.")
}
let buttonTwo = DefaultButton(title: "ADMIRE CAR") {
print("What a beauty!")
}
let buttonThree = DefaultButton(title: "BUY CAR") {
print("Ah, maybe next time :)")
}
// Add buttons to dialog
// Alternatively, you can use popup.addButton(buttonOne)
// to add a single button
popup.addButtons([buttonOne, buttonTwo, buttonThree])
// Present dialog
self.presentViewController(popup, animated: true, completion: nil)
PopupDialog is a subclass of UIViewController and as such can be added to your view controller modally. You can initialize it either with the handy default view or a custom view controller.
public convenience init(
title: String?,
message: String?,
image: UIImage? = nil,
buttonAlignment: UILayoutConstraintAxis = .Vertical,
transitionStyle: PopupDialogTransitionStyle = .BounceUp,
gestureDismissal: Bool = true,
completion: (() -> Void)? = nil)
The default dialog initializer is a convenient way of creating a popup with image, title and message (see image one and two).
Bascially, all parameters are optional, although this makes no sense at all. You want to at least add a message and a single button, otherwise the dialog can't be dismissed, unless you do it manually.
If you provide an image it will be pinned to the top/left/right of the dialog. The ratio of the image will be used to set the height of the image view, so no distortion will occur.
public init(
viewController: UIViewController,
buttonAlignment: UILayoutConstraintAxis = .Vertical,
transitionStyle: PopupDialogTransitionStyle = .BounceUp,
gestureDismissal: Bool = true,
completion: (() -> Void)? = nil)
You can pass your own view controller to PopupDialog (see image three). It is accessible via the viewController
property of PopupDialog, which has to be casted to your view controllers class to access its properties. Make sure the custom view defines all constraints needed, so you don't run into any autolayout issues.
Buttons are added below the controllers view, however, these buttons are optional. If you decide to not add any buttons, you have to take care of dismissing the dialog manually. Being a subclass of view controller, this can be easily done via dismissViewControllerAnimated(flag: Bool, completion: (() -> Void)?)
.
You can set a transition animation style with .BounceUp
being the default. The following transition styles are available
public enum PopupDialogTransitionStyle: Int {
case BounceUp
case BounceDown
case ZoomIn
case FadeIn
}
Buttons can be distributed either .Horizontal
or .Vertical
, with the latter being the default. Please note distributing buttons horizontally might not be a good idea if you have more than two buttons.
public enum UILayoutConstraintAxis : Int {
case Horizontal
case Vertical
}
Gesture dismissal allows your dialog being dismissed either by a background tap or by swiping the dialog down. By default, this is set to true
. You can prevent this behavior by setting gestureDismissal
to false
in the initializer.
This completion handler is called when the dialog was dismissed. This is especially useful for catching a gesture dismissal.
If you are using the default dialog, you can change selected properties at runtime:
// Create the dialog
let popup = PopupDialog(title: title, message: message, image: image)
// Present dialog
self.presentViewController(popup, animated: true, completion: nil)
// Get the default view controller and cast it
// Unfortunately, casting is necessary to support Objective-C
let vc = popup.viewController as! PopupDialogDefaultViewController
// Set dialog properties
vc.image = UIImage(...)
vc.titleText = "..."
vc.messageText = "..."
vc.buttonAlignment = .Horizontal
vc.transitionStyle = .BounceUp
Appearance is the preferred way of customizing the style of PopupDialog. The idea of PopupDialog is to define a theme in a single place, without having to provide style settings with every single instantiation. This way, creating a PopupDialog requires only minimal code to be written and no "wrappers".
This makes even more sense, as popup dialogs and alerts are supposed to look consistent throughout the app, that is, maintain a single style.
If you are using the default popup view, the following appearance settings are available:
var dialogAppearance = PopupDialogDefaultView.appearance()
dialogAppearance.backgroundColor = UIColor.whiteColor()
dialogAppearance.titleFont = UIFont.boldSystemFontOfSize(14)
dialogAppearance.titleColor = UIColor(white: 0.4, alpha: 1)
dialogAppearance.titleTextAlignment = .Center
dialogAppearance.messageFont = UIFont.systemFontOfSize(14)
dialogAppearance.messageColor = UIColor(white: 0.6, alpha: 1)
dialogAppearance.messageTextAlignment = .Center
dialogAppearance.cornerRadius = 4
dialogAppearance.shadowEnabled = true
dialogAppearance.shadowColor = UIColor.blackColor()
This refers to the view that is used as an overlay above the underlying view controller but below the popup dialog view. If that makes sense ;)
let overlayAppearance = PopupDialogOverlayView.appearance()
overlayAppearance.color = UIColor.blackColor()
overlayAppearance.blurRadius = 20
overlayAppearance.blurEnabled = true
overlayAppearance.liveBlur = false
overlayAppearance.opacity = 0.7
Turning on liveBlur
, that is realtime updates of the background view, results in a significantly higher CPU usage /power consumption and is therefore turned off by default now.
Choose wisely whether you need this feature or not ;)
The standard button classes available are DefaultButton
, CancelButton
and DestructiveButton
. All buttons feature the same appearance settings and can be styled seperately.
var buttonAppearance = DefaultButton.appearance()
// Default button
buttonAppearance.titleFont = UIFont.systemFontOfSize(14)
buttonAppearance.titleColor = UIColor(red: 0.25, green: 0.53, blue: 0.91, alpha: 1)
buttonAppearance.buttonColor = UIColor.clearColor()
buttonAppearance.separatorColor = UIColor(white: 0.9, alpha: 1)
// Below, only the differences are highlighted
// Cancel button
CancelButton.appearance().titleColor = UIColor.lightGrayColor()
// Destructive button
DestructiveButton.appearance().titleColor = UIColor.redColor()
Moreover, you can create a custom button by subclassing PopupDialogButton
. The following example creates a solid blue button, featuring a bold white title font. Separators are invisble.
public final class SolidBlueButton: PopupDialogButton {
override public func setupView() {
defaultFont = UIFont.boldSystemFontOfSize(16)
defaultTitleColor = UIColor.whiteColor()
defaultButtonColor = UIColor.blueColor()
defaultSeparatorColor = UIColor.clearColor()
super.setupView()
}
}
These buttons can be customized with the appearance settings given above as well.
The following is an example of a Dark Mode theme. You can find this in the Example project AppDelegate
, just uncomment it to apply the custom appearance.
// Customize dialog appearance
let pv = PopupDialogDefaultView.appearance()
pv.backgroundColor = UIColor(red:0.23, green:0.23, blue:0.27, alpha:1.00)
pv.titleFont = UIFont(name: "HelveticaNeue-Light", size: 16)!
pv.titleColor = UIColor.whiteColor()
pv.messageFont = UIFont(name: "HelveticaNeue", size: 14)!
pv.messageColor = UIColor(white: 0.8, alpha: 1)
pv.cornerRadius = 2
// Customize default button appearance
let db = DefaultButton.appearance()
db.titleFont = UIFont(name: "HelveticaNeue-Medium", size: 14)!
db.titleColor = UIColor.whiteColor()
db.buttonColor = UIColor(red:0.25, green:0.25, blue:0.29, alpha:1.00)
db.separatorColor = UIColor(red:0.20, green:0.20, blue:0.25, alpha:1.00)
// Customize cancel button appearance
let cb = CancelButton.appearance()
cb.titleFont = UIFont(name: "HelveticaNeue-Medium", size: 14)!
cb.titleColor = UIColor(white: 0.6, alpha: 1)
cb.buttonColor = UIColor(red:0.25, green:0.25, blue:0.29, alpha:1.00)
cb.separatorColor = UIColor(red:0.20, green:0.20, blue:0.25, alpha:1.00)
I can see that there is room for more customization options. I might add more of them over time.
Rotation and all screen sizes are supported. However, the dialog will never exceed a width of 340 points. This way, the dialog won't be too big on devices like iPads. However, landscape mode will not work well if the height of the dialog exceeds the width of the screen.
If you are using text fields in your custom view controller, popup dialog makes sure that the dialog is positioned above the keybord whenever it appears. You can opt out of this behaviour by setting keyboardShiftsView
to false on a PopupDialog.
PopupDialog exposes a nice and handy method that lets you trigger a button tap programmatically:
public func tapButtonWithIndex(index: Int)
Other than that, PopupDialog unit tests are included in the root folder.
PopupDialog can be used in Objective-C projects as well. Here is a basic example:
#import <PopupDialog/PopupDialog-Swift.h>
PopupDialog *popup = [[PopupDialog alloc] initWithTitle:@"TEST"
message:@"This is a test message!"
image:nil
buttonAlignment:UILayoutConstraintAxisHorizontal
transitionStyle:PopupDialogTransitionStyleBounceUp
gestureDismissal:YES
completion:nil];
CancelButton *cancel = [[CancelButton alloc] initWithTitle:@"CANCEL" dismissOnTap:YES action:^{
// Default action
}];
DefaultButton *ok = [[DefaultButton alloc] initWithTitle:@"OK" dismissOnTap:YES action:^{
// Ok action
}];
[popup addButtons: @[cancel, ok]];
[self presentViewController:popup animated:YES completion:nil];
Minimum requirement is iOS 8.0. This dialog was written with Swift 2.2, 3.X compatibility will be published on a seperate branch soon.
- 0.4.0 iOS 8 compatibility
- 0.3.3 Fixes buttons being added multiple times
- 0.3.2 Dialog repositioning when interacting with keyboard
Non dismissable buttons option
Additional completion handler when dialog is dismissed - 0.3.1 Fixed Carthage issues
- 0.3.0 Objective-C compatibility
- 0.2.2 Turned off liveBlur by default to increase performance
- 0.2.1 Dismiss via background tap or swipe down transition
- 0.2.0 You can now pass custom view controllers to the dialog. This introduces breaking changes.
- 0.1.6 Defer button action until animation completes
- 0.1.5 Exposed dialog properties
(titleText, messageText, image, buttonAlignment, transitionStyle) - 0.1.4 Pick transition animation style
- 0.1.3 Big screen support
Exposed basic shadow appearance - 0.1.2 Exposed blur and overlay appearance
- 0.1.1 Added themeing example
- 0.1.0 Intitial version
Martin Wildfeuer, [email protected]
for Orderella Ltd., orderella.co.uk
You might also want to follow us on Twitter, @theMWFire | @Orderella
Thanks to everyone who uses, enhances and improves this library, especially the contributors: ExceptionsSG, sjrmanning, 0x0c.
The sample project features two images from Markus Spiske raumrot.com:
Vintage Car One | Vintage Car Two
Thanks a lot for providing these :)
PopupDialog is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.