What I want to do is an horizontal scroll view with buttons inside and when A button came at the center of the screen it became bigger. How can I do this?
Intercept the delegate method for scrollViewDidScroll: and monitor the scrollviews contentOffset. Doing so will allow you to make any adjustments each time the scrollview moves. As your button.center moves closer to your scrollviews center, increase its frame.size. Be sure not to do anything overly complex in scrollViewDidScroll bc it will be called a lot.
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I can't figure out a solution. I have a UIScrollView, and on each scroll towards right, I will increase the contentSize of the scrollView and add a View at that place. The problem is I have managed to save the last content offset by delegation when scrollview start dragging but I don't understand which delegate method to use for measuring where the gesture stopped. If I use scrollViewDidEndDecelerating, will be called immediately after the scrollViewWillBeginDragging because the content is settled to the same size of the frame.
Does anybody have any solution on it?
I'm looking for a way of 'sticking' a UIScrollView to it's position unless the touch has been moved by a certain threshold, at which point it will jump to where it should have scrolled to and continue scrolling.
The reason for this is that I have a vertical scroll and each cell inside the UIScrollView has a horizontal scroll. So I'd like to introduce a slight 'stickyness' to make sure the user doesn't accidentally scroll vertically when they mean to scroll horizontally.
I started by hijacking the contentOffset property in scrollViewDidScroll. The trouble with that is I cannot find out how much the scrollView would have moved by if I were setting the contentOffset
If I try to add a UIPanGestureRecognizer to the class then it overrides the UIScrollView and the UIScrollView becomes unresponsive.
Does anyone know a way to do this?
EDIT: edits based on comments.
I have a UIScrollView in which vertical only scrolling is enabled. I'm displaying a grid of buttons (similar to the photo viewer image grid). The grid has to be drawn differently based on screen orientation, so that all of the screen real estate is used. Given the size of my buttons, I can fit 3 per row in portrait, and 4 per row in landscape.
I reposition all of the buttons in: willRotateToInterfaceOrientation:duration and then call: setContentSize: on my UIScrollView. Everything seems to work just fine, with the exception of the auto-scrolling that occurs after the call to SetContentSize:. In other words, let's say I was in portrait, and scrolled 3/4 of the way down the list, when I rotate to landscape, it auto-scrolls all the back up to the top.
The interesting thing is, in the same scenario, if I were to do a small flick scroll up or down, and then immediately rotate the device, the scroll view redraws correctly, and retains the current scroll position!
So, to be clear, the culprit here seems to be SetContentSize:, but obviously I have to call that for the scroll view to scroll correctly.
Any ideas on how I can retain the current scroll position?
Thanks!
You might try implementing the UIScrollViewDelegate method scrollViewShouldScrollToTop:, which tells the caller whether to scroll to the top or not. You may have to have some flag in your delegate that indicates if a rotation is underway or not, because under normal conditions you may actually want the ability to tap the status bar and have the scroll view scroll to the top.
If, on the other hand, you don't ever want the scroll view to scroll to the top automaticlly, simply implement that delegate method and have it return NO.
I had this problem, just did this and it works well for me
- (void)willAnimateRotationToInterfaceOrientation:(UIInterfaceOrientation)toInterfaceOrientation duration:(NSTimeInterval)duration
{
//calculate percentage down scrollview currently at
float c = self.scrollView.contentOffset.y / self.scrollView.contentSize.height;
//reposition subviews in the scrollview
[self positionThumbnails:toInterfaceOrientation];
//set the new scrollview offset to the same percentage,
// using the new scrollview height to calculate
self.scrollView.contentOffset =
CGPointMake(0, c * self.scrollView.contentSize.height);
}
In my case, I have a scrollview with a fixed width to device size, and variable height
I hope you can help me...
I have a scrollview (UIScrollview) that contains a contentView (UiView).
Inside the contentview I have a Horizontal slider. My problem is that if the user swipes just next to the slider, trying to hit the slider, the scrollview scrolls. I would like to enlarge the area of the slider if possible, or just disable scrolling for a certain part of the scroll view.
Is this possible, and if yes, how?
Thanks...
You need to look at the following properties for customizing the look of a scroll view:
indicatorStyle
scrollIndicatorInsets
Or if this isn't to your taste: You could subclass UIScrollView and when the custom slider receives touches, read them in transform them and call setContentOffset on the UIScrollView. In my opinion that seems like a big task for very little reward and I'd just stick with the default behaviour/look.
This is more of a check as I believe this is right but its a lot of work if I'm wrong.
I want to basically achieve fixed positioning with a scrollView. I want to have a list along the top that is always visible, scrolls horizontal only and then a scrollview beneath that to move around the information which scrolls both vertically and horizontally.
I figure I need to subclass UIScrollView and overwrite touchesBegan, touchesMoved and touchesEnded to send the touch to both UIScrollViews.
Is this right or off track?
Cheers
Overriding the touch events on a scroll view is probably not what you want to do. Instead you can simply use a single scroll view, and then in the parent view's -layoutSubviews or in the scroll view's delegate methods you can move the list so it's always at the same vertical position (use the scroll view's contentOffset property to determine where that should be). Both the delegate method and -layoutSubviews is called before the drawing actually occurs after the scroll view scrolls, so by always repositioning your view where you want it to be, it will appear to remain fixed to the user.