Checkout FlexboxLayout if you're interested in the Swift port
A simple UIKit extension to wrap the flexbox properties in regular UIView. This project is based on the robust Facebook's C implementation of Flexbox.
The goal is to have a small standalone UIKit library to layout elements. It doesn't rely on the DOM model at all.
![Gif](demo.gif)
#Usage
The easiest way to use the flexbox layout facilities is to instantiate a FLEXBOXContainerView
, set its flexbox properties (as exposed in the UIView category UIVIew+FLEXBOX
), add all the
subviews you want to it and additionaly set their flex properties.
If you have subviews which themselves will have subviews that you wish to layout using the flexbox engine, you simply have to set the UIView category property flexContainer
to YES
, and so on. You can also have nested FLEXBOXContainerView
s.
e.g. Given a view (in this case a UITableViewCell) with these subviews:
FLEXBOXContainerView *contentView;
UIView *left, *right;
UILabel *title, *caption;
...
[contentView addSubview:left];
[contentView addSubview:right];
[contentView addSubview:time];
[right addSubview:title];
[right addSubview:caption];
The following flexbox layout code
contentView.flexDirection = FLEXBOXFlexDirectionRow;
left.flexFixedSize = (CGSize){A_FIXED_SIZE, A_FIXED_SIZE};
left.flexMargin = (UIEdgeInsets){SOME_MARGIN, SOME_MARGIN, SOME_MARGIN, SOME_MARGIN};
left.flexAlignSelf = FLEXBOXAlignmentCenter;
rigth.flexContainer = YES;
right.flex = 1;
right.flexJustifyContent = FLEXBOXJustificationCenter;
time.flexMargin = (UIEdgeInsets){SOME_MARGIN, SOME_MARGIN, SOME_MARGIN, SOME_MARGIN};
time.flexPadding = (UIEdgeInsets){SOME_PADDING, SOME_PADDING, SOME_PADDING, SOME_PADDING};
time.flexAlignSelf = FLEXBOXAlignmentCenter;
Results in:
![Gif](cell-example.png)
##Advanced usage
You can use FlexboxKit without using FLEXBOXContainerView
by simply having a -[UIView layoutSubviews]
implementation that calls the -[UIView flexLayoutSubviews]
method defined in the UIView category UIVIew+FLEXBOX
.
e.g.
- (void)layoutSubviews
{
[super layoutSubviews];
[self flexLayoutSubviews];
}
If you wish to run the layout engine on a background thread you can do so by calling
[node layoutConstrainedToMaximumWidth:self.bounds.size.width]
in a background thread and then set the computed frames in the main thread.
e.g.
- (void)flexLayoutSubviewsInBackground
{
__weak __typeof(self) weakSelf = self;
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_global_queue(DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_HIGH, 0), ^{
__strong __typeof(self) strongSelf = weakSelf;
//run the flexbox engine on a backgroun thread...
strongSelf.flexNode.dimensions = strongSelf.bounds.size;
[strongSelf.flexNode layoutConstrainedToMaximumWidth:strongSelf.bounds.size.width];
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
//assign the computed frames on the main thread...
for (NSUInteger i = 0; i < strongSelf.flexNode.childrenCountBlock(); i++) {
UIView *subview = self.subviews[i];
FLEXBOXNode *subnode = strongSelf.flexNode.childrenAtIndexBlock(i);
subview.frame = CGRectIntegral(subnode.frame);
}
strongSelf.frame = (CGRect){strongSelf.flexNode.frame.origin, strongSelf.flexNode.frame.size};
});
});
}
It uses Facebook's flexbox implementation and was inspired by Josh Abernathy's SwiftBox and Robert Böhnke's FLXView.