When you use a 500x500 image in a smaller UIImageView
, it's still loading the larger image into memory. You can solve this by resizing the UIImage
, itself (not just adjusting the frame
of the UIImageView
), making a 160x160 image, and use that image in your view. See this answer for some code to resize the image, which can then be invoked as follows:
UIImage *smallImage = [image scaleImageToSizeAspectFill:CGSizeMake(160, 160)];
You might even want to save the resized image, so you're not constantly encumbering yourself with the computational overhead of creating the smaller images every time, e.g.:
NSData *data = UIImagePNGRepresentation(smallImage);
[data writeToFile:path atomically:YES];
You can then load that PNG file corresponding to your small image in future invocations of the view.
In answer to your question why it takes up so much memory, it's because while the image is probably stored as a compressed JPG or PNG in persistent storage, I suspect in memory it's held as an uncompressed bitmap. There are many internal formats, but a common one is a 32-bit format with 8 bits each for red, green, blue, and alpha. Regardless of the specifics, you can quickly see how a 500 x 500 pixel representation, with 4 bytes per pixel could translate to a 1 mb of memory. But a 160 x 160 image should be roughly one tenth the size.