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TOCropViewController

<p align="center"> <img src="https://github.com/TimOliver/TOCropViewController/raw/main/Images/screenshot.webp" width="840" style="margin:0 auto" /> </p>

CI Version Carthage compatible GitHub license Platform

TOCropViewController is an open-source UIViewController subclass to crop out sections of UIImage objects, as well as perform basic rotations. It is excellent for things like editing profile pictures, or sharing parts of a photo online. It has been designed with the iOS Photos app editor in mind, and as such, behaves in a way that should already feel familiar to users of iOS.

For Swift developers, CropViewController is a Swift wrapper that completely encapsulates TOCropViewController and provides a much more native, Swiftier interface.

Proudly powering apps by

<p align="center"> <img src="https://github.com/TimOliver/TOCropViewController/raw/main/Images/users.png" width="840" style="margin:0 auto" /> </p>

Looking for something more? If TOCropViewController doesn't meet your exact requirements, please consider IMG.LY with video editing and photo filter capabilities instead! (Disclaimer: Affiliate Link)

Features

System Requirements

iOS 11.0 or above

Installation

<details> <summary><strong>CocoaPods</strong></summary> <h4>Objective-C</h4>

Add the following to your Podfile:

pod 'TOCropViewController'
<h4>Swift</h4>

Add the following to your Podfile:

pod 'CropViewController'
</details> <details> <summary><strong>Swift Package Manager</strong></summary>

Add the following to your Package.swift:

dependencies: [
  // ...
  .package(url: "https://github.com/TimOliver/TOCropViewController.git"),
],
</details> <details> <summary><strong>Carthage</strong></summary>
  1. Add the following to your Cartfile:
github "TimOliver/TOCropViewController"
  1. Run carthage update

  2. From the Carthage/Build folder, import one of the two frameworks into your Xcode project. For Objective-C projects, import just TOCropViewController.framework and for Swift, import CropViewController.framework instead. Each framework is separate; you do not need to import both.

  3. Follow the remaining steps on Getting Started with Carthage to finish integrating the framework.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Manual Installation</strong></summary>

All of the necessary source and resource files for TOCropViewController are in Objective-C/TOCropViewController, and all of the necessary Swift files are in Swift/CropViewController.

For Objective-C projects, copy just the TOCropViewController directory to your Xcode project. For Swift projects, copy both TOCropViewController and CropViewController to your project.

</details>

Examples

Using TOCropViewController is very straightforward. Simply create a new instance passing the UIImage object you wish to crop, and then present it modally on the screen.

While TOCropViewController prefers to be presented modally, it can also be pushed to a UINavigationController stack.

For a complete working example, check out the sample apps included in this repo.

<details> <summary><strong>Basic Implementation</strong></summary>

Swift

func presentCropViewController() {
  let image: UIImage = ... //Load an image
  
  let cropViewController = CropViewController(image: image)
  cropViewController.delegate = self
  present(cropViewController, animated: true, completion: nil)
}

func cropViewController(_ cropViewController: CropViewController, didCropToImage image: UIImage, withRect cropRect: CGRect, angle: Int) {
        // 'image' is the newly cropped version of the original image
    }

Objective-C

- (void)presentCropViewController
{
  UIImage *image = ...; // Load an image
  
  TOCropViewController *cropViewController = [[TOCropViewController alloc] initWithImage:image];
  cropViewController.delegate = self;
  [self presentViewController:cropViewController animated:YES completion:nil];
}

- (void)cropViewController:(TOCropViewController *)cropViewController didCropToImage:(UIImage *)image withRect:(CGRect)cropRect angle:(NSInteger)angle
{
  // 'image' is the newly cropped version of the original image
}

Similar to many UIKit UIViewController subclasses, like MFMailComposeViewController, the class responsible for presenting view controller should also take care of dismissing it upon cancellation. To dismiss TOCropViewController, implement the cropViewController:didFinishCancelled: delegate method, and call dismissViewController:animated: from there.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Making a Circular Cropped Image</strong></summary>

Swift

func presentCropViewController() {
    var image: UIImage? // Load an image
    let cropViewController = CropViewController(croppingStyle: .circular, image: image)
    cropViewController.delegate = self
    self.present(cropViewController, animated: true, completion: nil)
}

func cropViewController(_ cropViewController: TOCropViewController?, didCropToCircularImage image: UIImage?, with cropRect: CGRect, angle: Int) {
    // 'image' is the newly cropped, circular version of the original image
}

Objective-C

- (void)presentCropViewController
{
UIImage *image = ...; // Load an image

TOCropViewController *cropViewController = [[TOCropViewController alloc] initWithCroppingStyle:TOCropViewCroppingStyleCircular image:image];
cropViewController.delegate = self;
[self presentViewController:cropViewController animated:YES completion:nil];
}

- (void)cropViewController:(TOCropViewController *)cropViewController didCropToCircularImage:(UIImage *)image withRect:(CGRect)cropRect angle:(NSInteger)angle
{
// 'image' is the newly cropped, circular version of the original image
}
</details> <details> <summary><strong>Sharing Cropped Images Via a Share Sheet</strong></summary>

Swift

func presentCropViewController() {
    var image: UIImage? // Load an image
    let cropViewController = CropViewController(image: image)
    cropViewController.showActivitySheetOnDone = true
    self.present(cropViewController, animated: true, completion: nil)
}

Objective-C

- (void)presentCropViewController
{
  UIImage *image = ...; // Load an image
  
  TOCropViewController *cropViewController = [[TOCropViewController alloc] initWithImage:image];
  cropViewController.showActivitySheetOnDone = YES;
  [self presentViewController:cropViewController animated:YES completion:nil];
}
</details> <details> <summary><strong>Presenting With a Custom Animation</strong></summary>

Optionally, TOCropViewController also supports a custom presentation animation where an already-visible copy of the image will zoom in to fill the screen.

Swift


func presentCropViewController() {
    var image: UIImage? // Load an image
    var imageView = UIImageView(image: image)
    var frame: CGRect = view.convert(imageView.frame, to: view)
    
    let cropViewController = CropViewController(image: image)
    cropViewController.delegate = self
    self.present(cropViewController, animated: true, completion: nil)
    cropViewController.presentAnimated(fromParentViewController: self, fromFrame: frame, completion: nil)
}

Objective-C

- (void)presentCropViewController
{
  UIImage *image = ...;
  UIImageView *imageView = [[UIImageView alloc] initWithImage:image];
  CGRect frame = [self.view convertRect:imageView.frame toView:self.view];
  
  TOCropViewController *cropViewController = [[TOCropViewController alloc] initWithImage:image];
  cropViewController.delegate = self;
  [self presentViewController:cropViewController animated:YES completion:nil];
  [cropViewController presentAnimatedFromParentViewController:self fromFrame:frame completion:nil];
}
</details>

Architecture of TOCropViewController

While traditional cropping UI implementations will usually just have a dimming view with a square hole cut out of the middle, TOCropViewController goes about its implementation a little differently.

<p align="center"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/TimOliver/TOCropViewController/master/breakdown.jpg" width="702" style="margin:0 auto" /> </p>

Since there are two views that are overlaid over the image (A dimming view and a translucency view), trying to cut a hole open in both of them would be rather complex. Instead, an image view is placed in a scroll view in the background, and a copy of the image view is placed on top, inside a container view that is clipped to the designated cropping size. The size and position of the foreground image is then made to match the background view, creating the illusion that there is a hole in the dimming views, and minimising the number of views onscreen.

Credits

TOCropViewController was originally created by Tim Oliver as a component for iComics, a comic reader app for iOS.

Thanks also goes to TOCropViewController's growing list of contributors!

iOS Device mockups used in the screenshot created by Pixeden.

License

TOCropViewController is licensed under the MIT License, please see the LICENSE file.