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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T02:43:28+00:00 2026-05-11T02:43:28+00:00

I have a Graph being drawn inside a UIScrollView . It’s one large UIView

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I have a Graph being drawn inside a UIScrollView. It’s one large UIView using a custom subclass of CATiledLayer as its layer.

When I zoom in and out of the UIScrollView, I want the graph to resize dynamically like it does when I return the graph from viewForZoomingInScrollView. However, the Graph redraws itself at the new zoom level, and I want to reset the transform scale to 1×1 so that the next time the user zooms, the transform starts from the current view. If I reset the transform to Identity in scrollViewDidEndZooming, it works in the simulator, but throws an EXC_BAD_ACCSES on the device.

This doesn’t even solve the issue entirely on the simulator either, because the next time the user zooms, the transform resets itself to whatever zoom level it was at, and so it looks like, if I was zoomed to 2x, for example, it’s suddenly at 4x. When I finish the zoom, it ends up at the correct scale, but the actual act of zooming looks bad.

So first: how do I allow the graph to redraw itself at the standard scale of 1×1 after zooming, and how do I have a smooth zoom throughout?

Edit: New findings The error seems to be ‘[CALayer retainCount]: message sent to deallocated instance‘

I’m never deallocating any layers myself. Before, I wasn’t even deleting any views or anything. This error was being thrown on zoom and also on rotate. If I delete the object before rotation and re-add it afterward, it doesn’t throw the exception. This is not an option for zooming.

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  1. 2026-05-11T02:43:29+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 2:43 am

    I can’t help you with the crashing, other than tell you to check and make sure you aren’t unintentionally autoreleasing a view or layer somewhere within your code. I’ve seen the simulator handle the timing of autoreleases differently than on the device (most often when threads are involved).

    The view scaling is an issue with UIScrollView I’ve run into, though. During a pinch-zooming event, UIScrollView will take the view you specified in the viewForZoomingInScrollView: delegate method and apply a transform to it. This transform provides a smooth scaling of the view without having to redraw it each frame. At the end of the zoom operation, your delegate method scrollViewDidEndZooming:withView:atScale: will be called and give you a chance to do a more high-quality rendering of your view at the new scale factor. Generally, it’s suggested that you reset the transform on your view to be CGAffineTransformIdentity and then have your view manually redraw itself at the new size scale.

    However, this causes a problem because UIScrollView doesn’t appear to monitor the content view transform, so on the next zoom operation it sets the transform of the content view to whatever the overall scale factor is. Since you’ve manually redrawn your view at the last scale factor, it compounds the scaling, which is what you’re seeing.

    As a workaround, I use a UIView subclass for my content view with the following methods defined:

    - (void)setTransformWithoutScaling:(CGAffineTransform)newTransform; {     [super setTransform:newTransform]; }  - (void)setTransform:(CGAffineTransform)newValue; {     [super setTransform:CGAffineTransformScale(newValue, 1.0f / previousScale, 1.0f / previousScale)]; } 

    where previousScale is a float instance variable of the view. I then implement the zooming delegate method as follows:

    - (void)scrollViewDidEndZooming:(UIScrollView *)scrollView withView:(UIView *)view atScale:(float)scale; {     [contentView setTransformWithoutScaling:CGAffineTransformIdentity]; // Code to manually redraw view at new scale here     contentView.previousScale = scale;     scrollView.contentSize = contentView.frame.size; } 

    By doing this, the transforms sent to the content view are adjusted based on the scale at which the view was last redrawn. When the pinch-zooming is done, the transform is reset to a scale of 1.0 by bypassing the adjustment in the normal setTransform: method. This seems to provide the correct scaling behavior while letting you draw a crisp view at the completion of a zoom.

    UPDATE (7/23/2010): iPhone OS 3.2 and above have changed the behavior of scroll views in regards to zooming. Now, a UIScrollView will respect the identity transform you apply to a content view and only provide the relative scale factor in -scrollViewDidEndZooming:withView:atScale:. Therefore, the above code for a UIView subclass is only necessary for devices running iPhone OS versions older than 3.2.

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