Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

Is there a way to find the frame of a particular UITabBarItem in a UITabBar?

Specifically, I want to create an animation of an image "falling" into one of the tabs, similar to e.g. deleting an email in the Mail, or buying a track in the iTunes app. So I need the target coordinates for the animation.

As far as I can tell, there's no public API to get the coordinates, but would love to be wrong about that. Short of that, I'll have to guesstimate the coordinates using the index of the given tab relative to the tab bar frame.

share|improve this question

1 Answer

The subviews associated with the tab bar items in a UITabBar are of class UITabBarButton. By logging the subviews of a UITabBar with two tabs:

for (UIView* view in self.tabBar.subviews)
{
    NSLog(view.description);
}

you get:

<_UITabBarBackgroundView: 0x6a91e00; frame = (0 0; 320 49); opaque = NO; autoresize = W; userInteractionEnabled = NO; layer = <CALayer: 0x6a91e90>> - (null)
<UITabBarButton: 0x6a8d900; frame = (2 1; 156 48); opaque = NO; layer = <CALayer: 0x6a8db10>>
<UITabBarButton: 0x6a91b70; frame = (162 1; 156 48); opaque = NO; layer = <CALayer: 0x6a8db40>>

Based on this the solution is kind of trivial. The method I wrote for trying this out is as follows:

+ (CGRect)frameForTabInTabBar:(UITabBar*)tabBar withIndex:(NSUInteger)index
{
    NSUInteger currentTabIndex = 0;

    for (UIView* subView in tabBar.subviews)
    {
        if ([subView isKindOfClass:NSClassFromString(@"UITabBarButton")])
        {
            if (currentTabIndex == index)
                return subView.frame;
            else
                currentTabIndex++;
        }
    }

    NSAssert(NO, @"Index is out of bounds");
    return CGRectNull;
}

It should be noted that the structure (subviews) of UITabBar and the class UITabBarButton itself are not part of the public API, so in theory it can change in any new iOS version without prior notification. Nevertheless it is unlikely that they would change such detail, and it works fine with iOS 5-6 and prior versions.

share|improve this answer
+1 for ipad, but This solution doesnt work for iPhone/ipod. This gives wrong coordinates. – Bhurudada Apr 29 at 14:36

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.