This is a UICollectionViewFlowLayout
bug, but there is a workaround. The problem is that the attributes returned by initialLayoutAttributesForAppearingItemAtIndexPath:
have the wrong frames. Specifically, they have the frames of the final, on screen position rather than the initial, off screen position. You just need to override this method and return correct frames. The basic structure of the override would look something like this:
- (UICollectionViewLayoutAttributes *)initialLayoutAttributesForAppearingItemAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)itemIndexPath
{
UICollectionViewLayoutAttributes *pose = [super initialLayoutAttributesForAppearingItemAtIndexPath:itemIndexPath];
if (<test for incorrect frame>) {
CGRect frame = pose.frame;
frame.origin.y = <calculate correct frame>;
pose.frame = frame;
}
return pose;
}
You will be responsible for identifying scenarios where the frames need to be adjusted, which may involve keeping your own internal state. I haven't worked through this logic, but I did do a crude test and was able to get smooth animation.
Generalizing a bit, it is my experience that there UICollectionViewFlowLayout
is so buggy and there are so many corner cases to contend with if you've got items moving on and off screen combined with any inserts, deletions, or moves, that I've found it easier to roll my own simple layouts. If you're not going to do any inserts, deletions, or moves, then overriding UICollectionViewFlowLayout
may well be your best bet.
Let me know if you need more help.
EDIT
If you're interested in looking at a 3-rd party layout, I open sourced my custom grid layout VCollectionViewGridLayout and added an example project demonstrating smooth expanding cell height. Try running the Expand project. There is also a Sort & Filter project with animated sorting and filtering. Both projects let you toggle between flow layout and grid layout so you can see the improvement.
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