MKPinAnnotationView custom Image is replaced by pin with animating drop
Asked Answered
E

2

10

I'm displaying user avatar images on a MapView. The avatars appear to be working if they are rendered without animation, however I'd like to animate their drop. If I set pinView.animatesDrop to true, then I lose the avatar and it is replaced by the pin. How can I animate the drop of my avatar without using the pin?

Here is my viewForAnnotation method I'm using:

- (MKAnnotationView *)mapView:(MKMapView *)mapView viewForAnnotation:(id <MKAnnotation>)annotation {
    if ([annotation isKindOfClass:[MKUserLocation class]])
        return nil;

    MKPinAnnotationView* pinView = (MKPinAnnotationView*)[self.mapView dequeueReusableAnnotationViewWithIdentifier:@"MyAnnotation"];

    if (!pinView) {
        pinView = [[MKPinAnnotationView alloc] initWithAnnotation:annotation reuseIdentifier:@"CustomPinAnnotation"];
    }
    else
        pinView.annotation = annotation;

    //If I set this to true, my image is replaced by the pin
    //pinView.animatesDrop = true;

    //I'm using SDWebImage
    [pinView setImageWithURL:[NSURL URLWithString:@"/pathtosomeavatar.png"] placeholderImage:[UIImage imageNamed:@"placeholder.png"]];

    //Adding a nice drop shadow here
    pinView.layer.shadowColor = [UIColor blackColor].CGColor;
    pinView.layer.shadowOffset = CGSizeMake(0, 1);
    pinView.layer.shadowOpacity = 0.5;
    pinView.layer.shadowRadius = 3.0;

    return pinView;
}
Epiphenomenon answered 8/5, 2012 at 15:8 Comment(3)
Please see #9815488Cali
Anna's link answers my question. #9815488Epiphenomenon
Anna, please make your comment an answer so I can give you credit.Epiphenomenon
C
35

When you want to use your own image for an annotation view, it's best to create a regular MKAnnotationView instead of an MKPinAnnotationView.

Since MKPinAnnotationView is a subclass of MKAnnotationView, it has an image property but it generally (usually when you don't expect it) ignores it and displays its built-in pin image instead.

So rather than fighting with it, it's best to just use a plain MKAnnotationView.

The big thing you lose by not using MKPinAnnotationView is the built-in drop animation which you'll have to implement manually.

See this previous answer for more details:
MKMapView: Instead of Annotation Pin, a custom view

Cali answered 17/5, 2012 at 17:45 Comment(0)
H
3

If you're stumbling on to this issue and you're sure that you're MKAnnotationView instead of an MKPinAnnotationView, ensure your MKMapView's delegate property hasn't been nilled.

Hydrometeor answered 11/12, 2013 at 17:53 Comment(0)

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