A curated list of awesome iOS animation libraries and frameworks for Objective-C and Swift.
Awesome iOS Animation is a curated collection of high-quality animation libraries and frameworks for iOS development. It serves as a centralized resource for developers looking to enhance their apps with smooth, engaging, and visually appealing animations without having to build them from scratch. The collection includes libraries for transitions, UI effects, pull-to-refresh, tab bars, loading indicators, and more.
iOS developers, particularly those working with Objective-C or Swift, who need to quickly find and implement polished animations in their mobile applications. It is also valuable for UI/UX designers and developers seeking inspiration or reusable animation components.
Developers choose Awesome iOS Animation because it aggregates the most popular and visually impressive iOS animation libraries in one place, saving time on research. Its curated nature, dual language support (Objective-C and Swift), and inclusion of visual previews (GIFs/screenshots) make it easier to evaluate and select the right tool for specific animation needs.
A curated list of awesome iOS animation, including Objective-C and Swift libraries
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
The list includes GIF previews for most libraries, allowing developers to quickly see animations in action before committing to integration, as shown with numerous embedded GIFs in the README.
Covers both Objective-C and Swift libraries, making it useful for projects using either language or transitioning between them, as highlighted in the description.
Aggregates libraries for various common iOS needs like transitions, pull-to-refresh, and loading indicators, saving research time with over 50 entries covering different effects.
Updated periodically with new projects, though irregularly, keeping the collection somewhat current with iOS animation trends, as noted in the README's update policy.
Does not provide information on library maintenance status, Swift version compatibility, or licensing, requiring extra vetting effort beyond the visual previews.
Merely links to repositories without installation guides, code examples, or best practices, leaving integration work entirely to the developer, as the README offers only URLs and GIFs.
The README admits updates are not regular ('不定期更新'), which can lead to outdated or deprecated library recommendations, reducing reliability for long-term projects.