• Stars
    star
    549
  • Rank 80,988 (Top 2 %)
  • Language
    Swift
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created about 10 years ago
  • Updated about 2 years ago

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Repository Details

Whole, half or floating point ratings control written in Swift

FloatRatingView

A simple rating view for iOS written in Swift! Supports whole, half or floating point values. I couldn't find anything that easily set floating point ratings, so I made this control based on a Ray Wenderlich tutorial. Some of the best iOS tutorials that I've come across.

Check out the post on medium for a full write-up.
https://medium.com/@glenyi/float-rating-view-in-swift-e740b6b9404d

FloatRatingView Demo

Usage

Initialize from a nib/xib or programmatically. Set the empty and full image, then you're pretty much good to go! Check out the demo app to see how it can be used.

Release v4.0 is updated for Swift 5.0 while v1.0.3 is on Swift 2.3.

Usage in an Objective-C Project

  1. Import the Swift File
  2. Ensure the build settings in your project are set to enable Swift usage (see here and here)
  3. import "YOUR_PROJECT_NAME-Swift.h" in your Objective-C files where you want to use FloatRatingView

Pod Installation

For Swift 2.3 projects just add the following to your podfile:

pod 'FloatRatingView', '~> 1.0.3'

For Swift 5.0 projects:

pod 'FloatRatingView', '~> 4'

How it works

The concept is a little different from the source tutorial. The float rating view lays the full image views on top of the empty image views then sets the CALayer mask property to partially hide full images. The full image view mask frame is calculated whenever needed for half or floating point values.