What I would do is draw a gradient layer, then draw on top of that a layer that is black with the arc erased.
Here's my attempt at roughly the image you provided (I omitted the white label in the center, but that's trivial):
And here's the code that generated it:
let r = CGRectMake(100,100,130,100)
let g = CAGradientLayer()
g.frame = r
let c1 = UIColor(
red: 151.0/255.0, green: 81.0/255.0, blue: 227.0/255.0, alpha: 1)
let c2 = UIColor(
red: 36.0/255.0, green: 176.0/255.0, blue: 233.0/255.0, alpha: 1)
g.colors = [c1.CGColor as AnyObject, c2.CGColor as AnyObject];
self.view.layer.addSublayer(g)
let percent = CGFloat(0.64) // percentage of circle
UIGraphicsBeginImageContextWithOptions(r.size, false, 0)
let con = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext()
CGContextFillRect(con, CGRect(origin: CGPoint(), size: r.size))
CGContextSetLineWidth(con, 5)
CGContextSetLineCap(con, kCGLineCapRound)
CGContextSetBlendMode(con, kCGBlendModeClear)
let pi = CGFloat(M_PI)
CGContextAddArc(con, r.size.width/2.0, r.size.height/2.0, 30,
-pi/2.0, -pi/2.0 + percent*pi*2.0, 0)
CGContextStrokePath(con)
let im = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
UIGraphicsEndImageContext()
let b = CALayer()
b.frame = r
b.contents = im.CGImage
self.view.layer.addSublayer(b)
The gradient layer (the first part of the code) is just a "serving suggestion". If that is not the gradient you want, you can design your own. You could draw it in Photoshop and use an image as the content of the gradient layer. Or you could make an "angular" layer in code, using third-party code such as https://github.com/paiv/AngleGradientLayer. The point of the example is merely to show how it is possible to "erase" an arc in a black layer so as to reveal the gradient concealed behind it, and thus appear to paint with a gradient.
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