I have a app I'm making that has 2 text fields and buttons below it. When the user starts to type, the keyboard comes up and covers the buttons. Is there a way to make the keyboard go away?
There are two ways to do so
// this one line will dismiss the keyboard from anywhere in your code
[self.view endEditing:YES];
or
with the delegate of textfield (you should declare it in your .h file first)
#interface someController : UIViewController <UITextFieldDelegate>
and the in .m
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField
{
// next line will dismiss the keyboard
[textField resignFirstResponder];
return YES;
}
Check UITextField documentation:
To dismiss the keyboard, send the resignFirstResponder message to the text field that is currently the first responder. Doing so causes the text field object to end the current editing session (with the delegate object’s consent) and hide the keyboard.
In other words, just send resignFirstResponder to an active text field object.
I use this:
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField
{
[textField resignFirstResponder];
[self.alertView dismissWithClickedButtonIndex:self.alertView.firstOtherButtonIndex animated:YES];
return YES;
}
In the view controller after setting the text field delegate to self.
How can I use a textfield rather than a search bar with the UISearchDisplay controller?
I want to completely customize the search bar by getting rid of the magnifying glass icon and customizing the background. Also stopping it from resizing and bringing up the 'cancel' button. I see some people using hacky ways to do this by editing parts of the search bar api that weren't supposed to be edited. So it seems the more accepted way to do customization on this level would be to use a UITextfield instead of a UISearchBar. But there doesn't seem to be ANY info on the web about doing this!
If I use a textfield, what methods do I need to call when text changes to make the UISearchDisplayController work?
The trick here is to rewrite the UISearchDisplayController. It really only does 3 things.
Move the searchbar up to the top of the view and hide the UINavigationBar.
Place a transparent cover view over the remainder of your view.
Show a UITableView with any search results.
So start by registering your UIViewController as a delegate for the UITextField and..
-(void)textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField {
//here is where you open the search.
//animate your textfield to y = 0.
//I usually make the search tableview and the cover a separate view,
//so I add them to my view here.
[self.navigationController setNavigationBarHidden:YES animated:YES];
}
-(BOOL)textField:(UITextField *)textField shouldChangeCharactersInRange:(NSRange)range replacementString:(NSString *)string {
NSString *searchText = [[NSString alloc] initWithString:[textField.text stringByReplacingCharactersInRange:range withString:string]];
//display your search results in your table here.
}
-(void)textFieldDidEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField {
//hide all of your search stuff
[self.navigationController setNavigationBarHidden:NO animated:YES];
}
I use a UITextView in my application. The text editing is ok. I set the return button to Done.
When I finish the editing, I like to hide the keyboard with the done button.
My Question: How can I set the done button?
Thanks,
Balu.
Set your controller as the textField's Delegate, implement UITextField Delegate method textFieldShouldReturn in your controller and resign first responder before returning TRUE/YES:
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField
{
[textField resignFirstResponder];
return YES;
}
I have a UISearchBar. I enabled the 'cancel' button so it says cancel right next to the search box how can i set that button to simply lower the keyboard when the user presses it?
For this there's one delegate method called when cancel button is pressed
-(void)searchBarCancelButtonClicked:(UISearchBar *) searchBar
{
[searchBar resignFirstResponder];
}
-Happy Coding....
I am trying to recreate something similar to the popup keyboard used in safari.
I am able to visually reproduce it by placeing a toolbar over my view and the appropriate buttons, however i cant figure out any way to dismiss the keyboard once the user has touched the done button.
There is a couple of things you need to remember. The number #1 part developers forget to set is the delegate of the textField.
If you are using the Interface Builder, you must remember that you need to set the delegate of the textField to the file Owner.
If you are not using Interface Builder then make sure you set the delegate of the textfield to self. I also include the returnType. For Example if the textField was called gameField:
gameField.delegate = self;
gameField.returnKeyType = UIReturnKeyDone;
You must also implement the UITextFieldDelegate for your ViewController.
#interface YourViewController : UIViewController <UITextFieldDelegate>
Finally you need to use the textFieldShouldReturn method and call [textField resignFirstResponder]
-(BOOL) textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField*) textField {
[textField resignFirstResponder];
return YES;
}
All your textFields will use this same method so you only need to have this setup once. As long as the delegate is set for the textField, the UITextFieldDelegate is implemented for the interface, you add the textFieldShouldReturn method and call the
resignFirstResponder your set.
Have you tried:
[viewReceivingKeys resignFirstResponder];
where viewReceivingKeys is the UIView that is receiving the text input?
If your building your own views in Interface Builder, set your view controller to be delegate for the text field and implement textFieldShouldReturn: from UITextFieldDelegate in your views controller.
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)theTextField
{
NSLog(#"%# textFieldShouldReturn", [self class]);
[theTextField resignFirstResponder];
// do stuff with the text
NSLog(#"text = %#", [theTextField text]);
return YES;
}
UITextFieldDelegate textFieldShouldReturn: in the iphone cocoa docs
If you're talking about dismissing the keyboard from a UITextField rather than a UITextView. Your question isn't that clear? If you are then ensure your class is marked as a UITextFieldDelegate in the interface file,
#interface MyController: UIViewController <UITextFieldDelegate> {
UITextField *activeTextField;
// ...remainder of code not show ...
}
and then you should implement the two delegate methods as below,
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField {
activeTextField = textField;!
return YES;
}
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField {
activeTextField = nil;
[textField resignFirstResponder];
return YES;
}
However if you're using a UITextView then things are a bit more complicated. The UITextViewDelegate protocol lacks the equivalent to the textFieldShouldReturn: method, presumably since we shouldn’t expect the Return key to be a signal that the user wishes to stop editing the text in a multi-line text entry dialog (after all, the user may want to insert line breaks by pressing Return).
However, there are several ways around the inability of the UITextView to resign as first responder using the keyboard. The usual method is to place a Done button in the navigation bar when the UITextView presents the pop-up keyboard. When tapped, this button asks the text view to resign as first responder, which will then dismiss the keyboard.
However, depending on how you’ve planned out your interface, you might want the UITextView to resign when the user taps outside the UITextView itself. To do this, you’d subclass UIView to accept touches, and then instruct the text view to resign when the user taps outside the view itself.
Create a new class,
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
#interface CustomView : UIView {
IBOutlet UITextView *textView;
}
#end
Then, in the implementation, implement the touchesEnded:withEvent: method and ask the UITextView to resign as first responder.
#import "CustomView.h"
#implementation CustomView
- (id)initWithFrame:(CGRect)frame {
if (self = [super initWithFrame:frame]) {
// Initialization code
}
return self;
}
- (void) awakeFromNib {
self.multipleTouchEnabled = YES;
}
- (void)touchesEnded:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
NSLog(#"touches began count %d, %#", [touches count], touches);
[textView resignFirstResponder];
[self.nextResponder touchesEnded:touches withEvent:event];
}
#end
Once you’ve added the class, you need to save all your changes, then go into Interface Builder and click on your view. Open the Identity inspector in the Utility pabel and change the type of the view in your nib file to be your CustomView rather than the default UIView class. Then in the Connections Inspector, drag the textView outlet to the UITextView. After doing so, and once you rebuild your application, touches outside the active UI elements will now dismiss the keyboard. Note however that if the UIView you are subclassing is “behind” other UI elements, these elements will intercept the touches before they reach the UIView layer. So while this solution is elegant, it can be used in only some situations. In many cases, you’ll have to resort to the brute force method of adding a Done button to the navigation bar to dismiss the keyboard.
use a navigation controller and pop the view when done?
for example, I use code like this to slide an about box in:
[[self navigationController] presentModalViewController:modalViewController animated:YES];
and then when the button in that about box is clicked, I use this to get rid of it:
[self.navigationController dismissModalViewControllerAnimated:YES];
In my case the about box occupies the whole screen, but I don't think it would have to for this to work.
edit: I think I may have misunderstood your question. Something along the lines of my code would be if you are faking the whole keyboard view yourself. I think that resign first responder is the right way to do it if it is the normal keyboard with your toolbar added on top.