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Purpose

FXBlurView is a UIView subclass that replicates the iOS 7 realtime background blur effect, but works on iOS 5 and above. It is designed to be as fast and as simple to use as possible. FXBlurView offers two modes of operation: static, where the view is rendered only once when it is added to a superview (though it can be updated by calling setNeedsDisplay) or dynamic, where it will automatically redraw itself on a background thread as often as possible.

Supported iOS & SDK Versions

  • Supported build target - iOS 6.1 (Xcode 4.6.2, Apple LLVM compiler 4.2)
  • Earliest supported deployment target - iOS 5.0
  • Earliest compatible deployment target - iOS 4.3

NOTE: 'Supported' means that the library has been tested with this version. 'Compatible' means that the library should work on this iOS version (i.e. it doesn't rely on any unavailable SDK features) but is no longer being tested for compatibility and may require tweaking or bug fixes to run correctly.

ARC Compatibility

As of version 1.3, FXBlurView requires ARC. If you wish to use FXBlurView in a non-ARC project, just add the -fobjc-arc compiler flag to the FXBlurView.m class. To do this, go to the Build Phases tab in your target settings, open the Compile Sources group, double-click FXBlurView.m in the list and type -fobjc-arc into the popover.

If you wish to convert your whole project to ARC, comment out the #error line in FXBlurView.m, then run the Edit > Refactor > Convert to Objective-C ARC... tool in Xcode and make sure all files that you wish to use ARC for (including FXBlurView.m) are checked.

Installation

To use FXBlurView, just drag the class files into your project and add the Accelerate framework. You can create FXBlurView instances programatically, or create them in Interface Builder by dragging an ordinary UIView into your view and setting its class to FXBlurView.

If you are using Interface Builder, to set the custom properties of FXBlurView (ones that are not supported by regular UIViews) either create an IBOutlet for your view and set the properties in code, or use the User Defined Runtime Attributes feature in Interface Builder (introduced in Xcode 4.2 for iOS 5+).

UIImage extensions

FXBlurView extends UIImage with the following method:

- (UIImage *)blurredImageWithRadius:(CGFloat)radius
                         iterations:(NSUInteger)iterations
                         tintColor:(UIColor *)tintColor;

This method applies a blur effect and returns the resultant blurred image without modifying the original. The radius property controls the extent of the blur effect. The iterations property controls the number of iterations. More iterations means higher quality. The tintColor is an optional color that will be blended with the resultant image. Note that the alpha component of the tintColor is ignored.

FXBlurView methods

+ (void)setUpdatesEnabled;
+ (void)setUpdatesDisabled;

These methods can be used to enable and disable updates for all dynamic FXBlurView instances with a single command. Useful for disabling updates immediately before performing an animation so that the FXBlurView updates don't cuase the animation to stutter. Calls can be nested, but ensure that the enabled/disabled calls are balanced, or the updates will be left permantently enabled or disabled.

- (void)setNeedsDisplay;

Inherited from UIView, this method can be used to trigger a (synchronous) update of the view. Useful when dynamic = NO.

FXBlurView properties

@property (nonatomic, getter = isDynamic) BOOL dynamic;

This property controls whether the FXBlurView updates dynamically, or only once when the view is added to its superview. Defaults to YES. Note that is dynamic is set to NO, you can still force the view to update by calling setNeedsDisplay. Dynamic blurring is extremely cpu-intensive, so you should always disable dyanmic views immediately prior to performing an animation to avoid stuttering. However, if you have mutliple FXBlurViews on screen then it is simpler to disable updates using the setUpdatesDisabled method rather than setting the dynamic property to NO.

@property (nonatomic, assign) NSUInteger iterations;

The number of blur iterations. More iterations improves the quality but reduces the performance. Defaults to 2 iterations.

@property (nonatomic, assign) NSTimeInterval updateInterval;

This controls the interval (in seconds) between successive updates when the FXBlurView is operating in dynamic mode. This defaults to zero, which means that the FXBlurView will update as fast as possible. This yields the best frame rate, but is also extremely CPU intensive and may cause the rest of your app's performance to degrade, especially on older devices. To alleviate this, try increasing the updateInterval value.

@property (nonatomic, assign) CGFloat blurRadius;	

This property controls the radius of the blur effect (in points). Defaults to a 40 point radius, which is similar to the iOS 7 blur effect.

@property (nonatomic, strong) UIColor *tintColor;

This in an optional tint color to be applied to the FXBlurView. The RGB components of the color will be blended with the blurred image, resulting in a gentle tint. To vary the intensity of the tint effect, use brighter or darker colors. The alpha component of the tintColor is ignored. If you do not wish to apply a tint, set this value to nil or [UIColor clearColor]. Note that if you are using Xcode 5 or above, FXBlurViews created in Interface Builder will have a blue tint by default.