I am having an issue with a scrollview when switching UIViewControllers. When I navigate between UIViewControllers the Scrollview seems to adjust itself. How do I stop the scrollview from moving?
You can use the scrollEnabled property to turn off scrolling when you want to switch controllers. [scrollView setScrollEnabled:NO];
Related
I feel like I have touched on every single possible cause for stopping this, but I have a UIScrollView in my Storyboard hooked up with an outlet and in the viewDidLoad I set the contentSize so that I can scroll (yes bigger than my frame size)!
However, whatever I change, I just can't scroll! I have a couple of textfields in my scrollview and bouncing enabled so I can see that when testing its moves up and down with my subviews in it but whatever I set the contentSize to I just can't scroll.
Anything I might be missing/should check? Is this a known issue with UIScrollView being used in a storyboard?
Whats even stranger is, I can do something like this:
[scrollView setBackgroundColor:[UIColor blueColor]]; and I have a blue scroll view! But setting content size fails.
Edit
My only code (otherwise scrollview is just dropped into storyboard view controller):
-(void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[scrollView setContentSize:CGSizeMake(320, 640)];
}
Logged frame, comes out as expected:
width: 320.00
height: 504.00
Edit 2
Turns out that removing any subviews of the scroll view in my storyboard lets it scroll just fine. If I add any subview to it at all via the storyboard, even a blank brand new UIButton it just won't apply the contentSize/allow scrolling.
use ViewDidLayoutSubview
- (void)viewDidLayoutSubviews
{
[_scrollView setContentSize:CGSizeMake(320, 500)];
}
UIViewController's method invoke sequence is as below
awakeFromNib
viewDidLoad
viewWillAppear
viewWillLayoutSubviews
viewDidLayoutSubviews
viewDidAppear
viewDidLoad is not a good place to put code that relies on frame sizes of IB objects. If you log the contentSize of your scroll view in viewDidLoad, you will see that it's (0,0). Move the code (where you set the content size) to viewDidAppear, and it will work properly.
Check these
User Interaction enabled
Outlet connected
Included contentsize greater than bounds
scrolling Enabled
eg
scrollView.contentSize = CGSizeMake(320, 640);
My storyboard looks like this for scrollview [working]
I had exactly the same line of code in viewDidAppear and it did not work
Moved it to viewDidLayoutSubviews and it worked correctly.
[scrollView setContentSize:CGSizeMake(320, 500)];
Thanks trick14 for the answer.
The issue is most probably with Auto Layout. UIScrollView needs special attention when using AutoLayout.
Quick-fix - bind one of the scroll's subviews to the top AND bottom space of it's superview (the scroll view).
Long story:
Questions on SO:
UIScrollView not scrolling regardless of large contentSize,
UIScrollView will not scroll, even after content size set,
UIScrollView doesn't use autolayout constraints
Apple's Documentation:
https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/technotes/tn2154/_index.html
Trip14's answer worked for me. In swift I coded it as:
override func viewDidLayoutSubviews() {
(self.view as! UIScrollView).contentSize = CGSizeMake(600, 600)
}
This seems to be a similar issue. Other Story
It might be an issue with auto layout or constraints in the storyboard.
the best way with the storyboard.:
I am stuck with a problem actually the scene is like this in my view controller i have place several buttons which i can move within the view now in same view half of the screens is occupied by uiscrollview in this scrollview also i have several uibuttons which i want to move from uiscrollview to uiview Now when i try to move uibutton from uiscrollview to uiview it hides as it moves from the scrollview similarly as i move uibutton from uiview to uiscrollview then also it hides as my drag reaches the scrollview area.
Please help me out with this problem
Thanks in advance....
Your UIButtons each have a superview. For the UIButtons in the scrollview, the UIScrollView is the superview. When you have scrollView.clipsToBounds == YES, then the UIButtons in the scrollview will become obscured if you move them outside of the visible area of the scrollview.
There are several possible solutions, including:
Add code to change the superview of the UIButtons once they reach the edge of the scrollview (but this is tricky, and I wouldn't do it unless there was an easier option, check out Apple's UIView documentation, especially (UIView)removeFromSuperview and (UIView)addSubview:). You would have to perform this switch of superview in the code that moves the button (or tracks the move).
Add the UIButtons to a UIView which is the parent of the scrollview, maybe even your viewcontroller.view (but your UIButtons in the scrollview will no longer move with the scrollview upon scrolling). You would add the buttons to the view behind the scrollview, but so that they show above it.
In my iPhone app, I have a view controller with two views (essentially, a front & back view). The front view is the main UIView, and the back view is a secondary UIView which is added as a subview using [self.view addSubview:backView] when showing the back and [backView removeFromSuperview] when hiding it. However, when the orientation changes, I have the following issue: the main UIView (frontView) rotates & all of its elements resize properly, but the secondary/subview UIView (backView) does not rotate & all of its elements do not resize properly. Does anyone have suggestions on how to make the secondary UIView autoresize properly according to the rules I have set in Interface Builder?
In the end, the solution I found was simply to separate my UIViews into separate UIViewControllers, and make sure that any views that I wanted to be able to rotate only had one UIView.
If I understand correctly, at the time of rotation 'backView' has been removed from it's superview, yeah? If so, that's the cause of the problem. The autoresize property determines how the view resizes relative to it's superview. If it doesn't have a superview it won't resize.
Perhaps using [backView setHidden:YES] instead of [backView removeFromSuperview] will be sufficient for your needs.
I had the same problem, here is how I fixed it based on imaginaryboy's
suggestions (thanks!)
Add the backview to the viewcontroller at viewDidLoad and hide it at the same time. Show it when needed, Hide it again. Set the resizing of the backview to UIViewAutoresizingFlexibleWidth in IB (or code I guess, I used IB)
Not that this is the same problem, but I found a similar problem when adding 2 subviews in my application:didFinishLaunchingWithOptions method. Since your reference above is using [self.view addSubview:view], I would understand that to mean that self is not your UIWindow. When adding an additional view controller to your App Delegate window (UIWindow), the second view controller will NOT receive any rotation events and will never rotate. Only the first view controller added to UIWindow will rotate. See:Technical Q&A QA1688 I believe this also affects views added after the first view where the first view is later removed from the superview.
I ended up following the suggestion I read elsewhere to use separate views for each orientation, thereby eliminating the need to worry about resizing behavior. As always, YMMV.
Or; if you want to avoid an additional controller, you can achieve the same effect by setting view.frame in willRotateToInterfaceOrientation:: like so
if(UIInterfaceOrientationIsLandscape([[UIApplication sharedApplication] statusBarOrientation])) ;//set stubborn view.frame for landscape orientation
else ; //set stubborn view.frame for portrait orientation
Although it feels like a hack; it's simple.
I have a UIScrollView subclass with a certain subview I'd like to prevent from scrolling (while all the other subviews scroll as normal).
The closest example to this I can think of is UITableView's "index strip" on the right side (look in the Contacts app to see an example). I am guessing this is a subview of the table (scrollview) but it does not move as the user scrolls.
I can't seem to make my subview stay put! How can I accomplish this?
The trick is to adjust the frame of the "non-scrollable" subview inside -layoutSubviews.
Add the view that you want not to move as a sibling view of the scroll view on top of the scroll view instead of as a subview.
You can set it's property called userInteractionEnabled to NO
I have a UIScrollView in my project. I have a view controller I would like to add as a child of the UIScrollview. Would I just do that like this:
[scrollView addSubview:theViewController.view];
or is there a better way?
(theView is a view, not the TV show)
Furthermore, I would like to be able to use a UIButton in scrollView's parent view controller to toggle whether or not the user is scrolling with scrollView and NOT interacting with theView or NOT scrolling with scrollview and interacting with theView. Should I just have that set the property:
scrollView.userInteractionEnabled = NO;
or would that disable interaction with theView because it's a child?
Thanks for your help!
This is the proper way.
On the scrollView, setScrollEnabled: to turn off scrolling.