Jan 14, 2014 22:40
Hi, sorry I am out of the country for for a couple of days, I will check SO from time to time, but I'm afraid I can't look at the code right now.
Jan 11, 2014 13:41
A path is a very compact description of the same content, hence you have available memory to implement a full undo stack
Jan 11, 2014 13:40
The advantage would be that you have memory for storing just a few images (depending on screen resolution, RAM on device, etc)
Jan 11, 2014 13:40
> What will be the advantage of storing paths Vs Images
Jan 9, 2014 18:30
Better then to store the paths for each stroke, along with the pen size, color, etc.
Jan 9, 2014 18:30
Hi again! I think I already wrote this before, but it is probably not a good idea to save the entire images in an undo stack. An image is quite large and you should limit the number of images you have (it must absolutely be a fixed number or I can guarantee that your app will crash for the users).
Jan 8, 2014 08:57
This thread might help cocoabuilder.com/archive/cocoa/…
Jan 7, 2014 21:01
My comment about the CGPathRef was if you wanted to implement a full undo stack. This requires some redesign of your code.
Jan 7, 2014 21:00
I had a look at your code, and I think you are setting up the CGLayers correctly. However, you are still storing images in arrays. To undo the current stroke, you only need two layers. Please see my updated answer.
Jan 7, 2014 14:30
I think I see where you are going. Maybe it would be wiser to store your drawings in collections of CGPathRefs instead?
Jan 7, 2014 12:57
Oh, and of course, when you draw the view, you overlay the temporary context over the permanent context. This gives the user the illusion that the incorrect stroke is deleted when the new, correct, touch begins.
Jan 7, 2014 12:56
In other words, during the touchesMoved, only draw to the temporary context. Then in touchesReleased, draw the temporary context onto the permanent context, then clear the temporary context. Repeat the process every time the user touches.
Jan 7, 2014 12:56
Does it make sense?
Jan 7, 2014 12:55
Hi, yes I saw that question. I suggested that you create a temporary context for the current stroke and then only draw it permanently once the fingers were released. This is what I meant with two contexts.
Jan 7, 2014 10:20
I'm sorry, but you lost me there. Which question are you referring to? I can't see how your question (stackoverflow.com/questions/20881721/…) relates to the creation of two contexts. Did my suggestion in stackoverflow.com/questions/20853765/… solve your issue?
Jan 2, 2014 15:58
Just looked at it briefly. I thought you might get some inspiration from it for the undo/redo. What he does is he stores the paths in a data structure and then selectively paints it every time. This saves you from the trouble of maintaining the contexts, but you have to create the datastructure instead of course.
Jan 2, 2014 15:51
What about it?
Jan 2, 2014 15:50
Jan 2, 2014 15:49
I see. I think you need to consider how to actually store the drawings then, because your solution won't scale. You need to create some kind of vector format. It is going to be a lot more complicated than just storing an image into an array.
Jan 2, 2014 15:46
You are essentially creating a new full-screen bitmap for every editing operation that way. You won't get very far until you run out of memory
Jan 2, 2014 15:45
I do not understand what you try to do. Are you trying to undo/redo in several steps?
Jan 2, 2014 15:40
Either I am missing something, or this is exactly what you do (creating two contexts). I don't see why you store them in a dictionary though
Jan 2, 2014 15:36
You might not have to create two contexts, but what do you mean with "undo those touches"?
Jan 2, 2014 15:07
Then everytime a new finger is tapping higher than any previous finger, you discard whatever strokes have been added since last time the finger was released
Jan 2, 2014 15:07
- (void)touchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
UITouch* topmostTouch = nil;
for (UITouch *touch in touches)
{
CGPoint lastPoint = [touch locationInView:self.view];
if(!topmostTouch || [topmostTouch locationInView:self.view].y > lastPoint.y) {
topmostTouch = touch;
touchStartPoint = lastPoint;
}
}
// A new finger became the drawing finger, discard any previous strokes since last touchesEnded
if(self->drawingTouch != nil && self->drawingTouch != topmostTouch) {
NSLog(@"Resetting");
Jan 2, 2014 15:07
What about something like this
Jan 2, 2014 14:34
Let me see if I can whip up an example :)
Jan 2, 2014 14:26
You could also use CGLayer for that
Jan 2, 2014 14:15
I think you could solve it by drawing the strokes first to a temporary context and then once you have decided to keep it, move it to the permanent context. Basically two images layered on top of each other. This way you can "undo" strokes.
Jan 2, 2014 14:06
I tried in the simulator only
Jan 2, 2014 14:05
Note that you can use mutable bitmaps instead of just recreating them every time.
Jan 2, 2014 14:05
What they probably do in the Bamboo app is to keep two bitmaps, one for the persistent part of the bitmap and one for the temporary part. If the line is supposed to be persisted, it the temporary bitmap is drawn on the persistent bitmap. Otherwise the temporary bitmap is just cleared.
Jan 2, 2014 14:03
Regarding detecting hand vs. finger, there is no silver bullet that will solve all your problems. You have to experiment with a mix of heuristics and user settings. Maybe require the point to move some minimum distance?
Jan 2, 2014 14:03
No, in my code example, you can remove the NSDictionary. I was just keeping your code with minimal change. If you only need one finger, you don't need to store more than one point.
Jan 2, 2014 14:03
I ran the code, I did not notice any lag, though it is not the most efficient way of drawing since the bitmap is recreated every time you draw a new line segment.
 
Nov 7, 2012 07:20
The ALAssetLibrary has a assetForURL:resultBlock:failureBlock: method that you use to retrieve the ALAsset object.
Nov 4, 2012 13:48
You are probably correct in that you cannot save the object. Again, if you save the URL you should be able to retrieve the object from the assets library. Did you try this? What problems did you encounter?
Oct 30, 2012 11:07
I am sorry, but I think I lost what you are trying to do. Can you show some code?
Oct 29, 2012 19:26
Why do you want to do that?
Oct 29, 2012 07:49
A singleton in ObjC is just an object with a static method that returns a single instance of that class. See e.g. stackoverflow.com/questions/145154/…
Oct 26, 2012 09:36
To load the ALAsset from a URL, use the defaultAssetsLibrary which has a method [ALAssetsLibrary assetForURL:resultBlock:failureBlock:]. When you start the app next time and read the saved URLs, use this method for each URL that you saved. This should give you the correct assets to use.
Oct 26, 2012 09:35
The ALAsset is something you should treat as something temporary. You should not try to store it between sessions. It is recreated when the asset library enumerates the assets. What you can store is its URL. That is a unique way of identifying assets, and this is what you should use for comparing assets.
Oct 25, 2012 19:07
The comparison looks OK, but how are you reading back the ALAsset from the URL?
Oct 25, 2012 10:35
Ah, I see what you are trying to do. You have to investigate how this comparison works. The problem is that you can't be sure the comparison holds between sessions. The only thing you can use for comparison is the URL itself. What you could try is when you read back the URLs, use the defaultAssetsLibrary to find the ALAsset for your URL and use that for selection.
Oct 25, 2012 08:20
Its URL is the serializable property, and uniquely identifies it. What doesn't work when retrieving the ALAsset from an URL? Did you get an exception in assetForURL?
Oct 25, 2012 08:20
The most important to note here: The ALAsset object is not likely to be serializable, regardless of how you do it.
Oct 24, 2012 07:19
Anyhow, you can save the type if you wish. See the example that I gave in my answer, but replace "label" with "type". To get the properties from the ALAsset, use the valueForProperty:method.
Oct 24, 2012 07:18
The example you give has two items, Type and URL. I still cannot understand why you need to save the type. You can get the type once you recreate the asset object from the type.
 
Oct 24, 2012 07:21
Were you able to try the change I suggested in my edited answer? Did it help?