I'll just quote Apple Doc and explain:
@property BOOL shouldRasterize
When the value of this property is YES, the layer is
rendered as a bitmap in its local coordinate space and then composited
to the destination with any other content. Shadow effects and any
filters in the filters property are rasterized and included in the
bitmap. However, the current opacity of the layer is not rasterized.
If the rasterized bitmap requires scaling during compositing, the
filters in the minificationFilter and magnificationFilter properties
are applied as needed.
So basically when shouldRasterize is set to YES, every pixel that will compose the layer is calculated and the whole layer is cached as a bitmap.
- When will you benefit from it ?
When you only need to draw it once. That means when you need just pure "simple" animation (eg moving, transform, scaling...) because CoreAnimation will actually use that layer without redrawing it every frame. It's a very powerful feature to cache complex layers (with shadows and corner radius) combined with CoreAnimation.
- When will it kill you framerate ?
When your layer is redisplayed many times, because on top of the drawing that is already taking effect, the shouldRasterize
will process all pixels to cache the bitmap data.
So the real question you should ask yourself is this : "On which layer am I applying the shouldRasterize
to YES ? And how often is this layer redrawn ?"
Hope this was clear enough.
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