For Xcode 11.3 and iOS 13 other answers didn't work for me. However, based on those I've came up to the new solution using CGAffineTransform
I didn't test this code well, but this might actually work.
extension UITabBarController {
func setTabBarHidden(_ isHidden: Bool) {
if !isHidden { tabBar.isHidden = false }
let height = tabBar.frame.size.height
let offsetY = view.frame.height - (isHidden ? 0 : height)
tabBar.transform = CGAffineTransform(translationX: 0, y: offsetY)
UIView.animate(withDuration: 0.25, animations: {
self.tabBar.transform = .identity
}) { _ in
self.tabBar.isHidden = isHidden
}
}
}
Hope that helps.
UPDATE 09.03.2020:
I've finally found an awesome implementation of hiding tab bar with animation. It's huge advantage it's able to work either in common cases and in custom navigation controller transitions. Since author's blog is quite unstable, I'll leave the code below. Original source: https://www.iamsim.me/hiding-the-uitabbar-of-a-uitabbarcontroller/
Implementation:
extension UITabBarController {
/**
Show or hide the tab bar.
- Parameter hidden: `true` if the bar should be hidden.
- Parameter animated: `true` if the action should be animated.
- Parameter transitionCoordinator: An optional `UIViewControllerTransitionCoordinator` to perform the animation
along side with. For example during a push on a `UINavigationController`.
*/
func setTabBar(
hidden: Bool,
animated: Bool = true,
along transitionCoordinator: UIViewControllerTransitionCoordinator? = nil
) {
guard isTabBarHidden != hidden else { return }
let offsetY = hidden ? tabBar.frame.height : -tabBar.frame.height
let endFrame = tabBar.frame.offsetBy(dx: 0, dy: offsetY)
let vc: UIViewController? = viewControllers?[selectedIndex]
var newInsets: UIEdgeInsets? = vc?.additionalSafeAreaInsets
let originalInsets = newInsets
newInsets?.bottom -= offsetY
/// Helper method for updating child view controller's safe area insets.
func set(childViewController cvc: UIViewController?, additionalSafeArea: UIEdgeInsets) {
cvc?.additionalSafeAreaInsets = additionalSafeArea
cvc?.view.setNeedsLayout()
}
// Update safe area insets for the current view controller before the animation takes place when hiding the bar.
if hidden, let insets = newInsets { set(childViewController: vc, additionalSafeArea: insets) }
guard animated else {
tabBar.frame = endFrame
return
}
// Perform animation with coordinato if one is given. Update safe area insets _after_ the animation is complete,
// if we're showing the tab bar.
weak var tabBarRef = self.tabBar
if let tc = transitionCoordinator {
tc.animateAlongsideTransition(in: self.view, animation: { _ in tabBarRef?.frame = endFrame }) { context in
if !hidden, let insets = context.isCancelled ? originalInsets : newInsets {
set(childViewController: vc, additionalSafeArea: insets)
}
}
} else {
UIView.animate(withDuration: 0.3, animations: { tabBarRef?.frame = endFrame }) { didFinish in
if !hidden, didFinish, let insets = newInsets {
set(childViewController: vc, additionalSafeArea: insets)
}
}
}
}
/// `true` if the tab bar is currently hidden.
var isTabBarHidden: Bool {
return !tabBar.frame.intersects(view.frame)
}
}
If you're dealing with custom navigation transitions just pass a transitionCoordinator
property of "from" controller, so animations are in sync:
from.tabBarController?.setTabBar(hidden: true, along: from.transitionCoordinator)
Note, that in such case the initial solution work very glitchy.