Layout question Titanium Mobile - iphone

I'm having a bit of trouble with the layout of the GUI in Titanium Mobile (iPhone). Is there a guide/article somewhere that explains how height/width/positioning/scrolling/etc. works in Titanium Mobile?
Right now I'm stuck on two problems:
I want a scrollable window with an ImageView in the top part, and a TableView beneath it. They should both scroll together. I tried adding them both to a ScrollView and stretching the ScrollView to the size of the window, but then the ImageView is fixed to the top of the screen, and the TableView is scrollable in the bottom half of the screen, whereas everything should scroll together within the window.
I want to create an editable grouped TableView similar to the "Contacts" app on iPhone. For the blue labels on the left I created a label and added them to the TableRow, then added a textfield for the rest of the row. This works, but is it possible to give the label an 'auto' width large enough to fit the text and a bit of padding left and right, and have the textfield on the right to fill the rest of the row (I tried setting the width of the label to 'auto', that doesn't do the trick).
I hope my questions are clear, otherwise leave a comment and I'll make some screenshots describing the problems visually.
Thanks for any help!

0) Nope, there is no "layout" documentation in one nice place.
1) Make the entire display a table. Put the image view into the headerView of a table. That's how I did this:
2) I don't know about textfields, sorry. But as a fallback, you can do labels like above, and then load a separate form in another screen. That may be your simplest/best option.

var baseScrollView = Ti.UI.createScrollView({
top:0,
contentWidth:'auto',
contentHeight:'auto',
showVerticalScrollIndicator:true,
showHorizontalScrollIndicator:false,
backgroundColor:'white',
scrollType : 'vertical'
});
var iv = Ti.UI.createImageView({
borderRadius:10,
top:10,
width:300,
height:300,
image:currentWindow._rowObject["image"]
});
baseScrollView.add(iv);
var data = [];
tableView = Titanium.UI.createTableView({
top:320,
height:400,
scrollable: false,
data:data,
touchEnabled : true,
allowsSelection : false,
font: {
fontFamily:"Trebuchet MS",
fontSize:12
},
style : Titanium.UI.iPhone.TableViewStyle.GROUPED
});
baseScrollView.add(tableView);

Related

sectionHeaderTopPadding doesn't apply on Grouped and InsetGrouped UITableView

since iOS15 a strange top gap started to appear
after research i found out that
if #available(iOS 15, *) {
tableView.sectionHeaderTopPadding = 0
}
should solve the issue
however this works only for plain style table (UITableView.Style.plain), but my table is grouped and it looks like this property is taking no effect on GROUPED style (UITableView.Style.grouped)
is this a bug? how to remove the gap on grouped table?
According to the What's new in UIKit video from WWDC2021, top padding seems to have been added only to the plain style of UITableView.
Here's the part that mentions it
We have a new appearance for headers in iOS 15. For plain lists, section headers now display seamlessly in line with the content, and only display a visible background material when becoming pinned to the top as you scroll down. In addition, there's new padding inserted above each section header to visually separate the sections with this new design.
You should use this plain style in conjunction with index bars for fast scrubbing when list content is long as demonstrated in the Contacts app.
https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2021/10059/?time=438
You can try this (this worked for me for grouped/insetGrouped)
if #available(iOS 15.0, *) {
UITableView.appearance().sectionHeaderTopPadding = 0
let tableHeaderView = UIView()
tableHeaderView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = false
tableHeaderView.heightAnchor.constraint(equalToConstant: 5).isActive = true
UITableView.appearance().tableHeaderView = tableHeaderView
} else {
// Fallback on earlier versions
}

Is there a way in SwiftUI to detect if a user has Larger Text size enabled?

I've read all the articles about supporting dynamic text size, but my problem is that I have a view consisting of shapes and some text. I needed to hard code the height of this view, so when a user uses a larger text size the text overlaps the shapes. What I would like to do is detect when a larger text size is used and increase the hard coded height of the view.
There is an environment value for that:
#Environment(\.sizeCategory) var sizeCategory
With that, you can do stuff like:
if sizeCategory > ContentSizeCategory.large {
// views for large text
} else {
// views for regular/small text
}
You should also check out the #ScaledMetric property wrapper, which will auto-scale your var based on the user’s text size:
#ScaledMetric var height: CGFloat = 100
Here's a nice summary of both: https://swiftwithmajid.com/2019/10/09/dynamic-type-in-swiftui/

How to align bottom a PdfPCell spaning across more than one page?

I'm using iTextSharp version 4.1.6.16. I have a PdfPTable with two columns (1 row).
There is a lot of content in right cell so it spans across whole page and reaches next page.
In the left cell I only want to put some small PdfPTable at its bottom. To do it I use cell.VerticalAlignment = Element.ALIGN_BOTTOM; on the left cell of topmost table. This works well if the row is not bigger than a page.
If the row reaches next page, then the content of the left cell is indeed aligned to bottom, but to bottom of first page. So the right cell's content still continues on the next page, but the left cell is empty there (I tested with background color that it spans to next page also).
I tried setting KeepTogether on the inner table but it doesn't have any effect. I also thought about doing it with CellEvent but I couldn't find so far how to position IElement (not only Image or text) absolutely in the cell.
Is it a bug or designed behavior, that the content is aligned to the bottom of the first page the cell occupies? Is there a workaround or some better way to put content at the bottom of the cell no matter where it ends?
I've finally solved the issue with following workaround.
I created a CellEvent that gets PdfPTable and shifts it upwards as much as its content takes:
class BottomFix : IPdfPCellEvent
{
private readonly PdfPTable _content;
public BottomFix(PdfPTable content)
{
_content = content;
}
public void CellLayout(PdfPCell cell, Rectangle position, PdfContentByte[] canvases)
{
_content?.WriteSelectedRows(0, -1, position.Left, position.Top + _content.TotalHeight, canvases[PdfPTable.BACKGROUNDCANVAS]);
}
}
Then to my original two-row table I added second row, and I add there a cell of height equal to 0, where instead of putting content into, I use this CellEvent. The original left cell is left empty, so the content of next row is pushed onto it and it looks as it was originally there. I don't have borders in this table so they are not an issue, but it can also be solved by setting border of this 1px cell to none.
var cell = new PdfPCell();
var table = new PdfPTable(1) { /* some content etc... */ };
cell.FixedHeight = 0;
cell.CellEvent = new BottomFix(table);
// such prepared cell goes to top level table, second row, left column

iOS 5 fixed positioning and virtual keyboard

I have a mobile website which has a div pinned to the bottom of the screen via position:fixed. All works fine in iOS 5 (I'm testing on an iPod Touch) until I'm on a page with a form. When I tap into an input field and the virtual keyboard appears, suddenly the fixed position of my div is lost. The div now scrolls with the page as long as the keyboard is visible. Once I click Done to close the keyboard, the div reverts to its position at the bottom of the screen and obeys the position:fixed rule.
Has anyone else experienced this sort of behavior? Is this expected? Thanks.
I had this problem in my application. Here's how I'm working around it:
input.on('focus', function(){
header.css({position:'absolute'});
});
input.on('blur', function(){
header.css({position:'fixed'});
});
I'm just scrolling to the top and positioning it there, so the iOS user doesn't notice anything odd going on. Wrap this in some user agent detection so other users don't get this behavior.
I had a slightly different ipad issue where the virtual keyboard pushed my viewport up offscreen. Then after the user closed the virtual keyboard my viewport was still offscreen. In my case I did something like the following:
var el = document.getElementById('someInputElement');
function blurInput() {
window.scrollTo(0, 0);
}
el.addEventListener('blur', blurInput, false);
This is the code we use to fix problem with ipad. It basically detect discrepancies between offset and scroll position - which means 'fixed' isn't working correctly.
$(window).bind('scroll', function () {
var $nav = $(".navbar")
var scrollTop = $(window).scrollTop();
var offsetTop = $nav.offset().top;
if (Math.abs(scrollTop - offsetTop) > 1) {
$nav.css('position', 'absolute');
setTimeout(function(){
$nav.css('position', 'fixed');
}, 1);
}
});
The position fixed elements simply don't update their position when the keyboard is up. I found that by tricking Safari into thinking that the page has resized, though, the elements will re-position themselves. It's not perfect, but at least you don't have to worry about switching to 'position: absolute' and tracking changes yourself.
The following code just listens for when the user is likely to be using the keyboard (due to an input being focused), and until it hears a blur it just listens for any scroll events and then does the resize trick. Seems to be working pretty well for me thus far.
var needsScrollUpdate = false;
$(document).scroll(function(){
if(needsScrollUpdate) {
setTimeout(function() {
$("body").css("height", "+=1").css("height", "-=1");
}, 0);
}
});
$("input, textarea").live("focus", function(e) {
needsScrollUpdate = true;
});
$("input, textarea").live("blur", function(e) {
needsScrollUpdate = false;
});
Just in case somebody happens upon this thread as I did while researching this issue. I found this thread helpful in stimulating my thinking on this issue.
This was my solution for this on a recent project. You just need to change the value of "targetElem" to a jQuery selector that represents your header.
if(navigator.userAgent.match(/iPad/i) != null){
var iOSKeyboardFix = {
targetElem: $('#fooSelector'),
init: (function(){
$("input, textarea").on("focus", function() {
iOSKeyboardFix.bind();
});
})(),
bind: function(){
$(document).on('scroll', iOSKeyboardFix.react);
iOSKeyboardFix.react();
},
react: function(){
var offsetX = iOSKeyboardFix.targetElem.offset().top;
var scrollX = $(window).scrollTop();
var changeX = offsetX - scrollX;
iOSKeyboardFix.targetElem.css({'position': 'fixed', 'top' : '-'+changeX+'px'});
$('input, textarea').on('blur', iOSKeyboardFix.undo);
$(document).on('touchstart', iOSKeyboardFix.undo);
},
undo: function(){
iOSKeyboardFix.targetElem.removeAttr('style');
document.activeElement.blur();
$(document).off('scroll',iOSKeyboardFix.react);
$(document).off('touchstart', iOSKeyboardFix.undo);
$('input, textarea').off('blur', iOSKeyboardFix.undo);
}
};
};
There is a little bit of a delay in the fix taking hold because iOS stops DOM manipulation while it is scrolling, but it does the trick...
None of the other answers I've found for this bug have worked for me. I was able to fix it simply by scrolling the page back up by 34px, the amount mobile safari scrolls it down. with jquery:
$('.search-form').on('focusin', function(){
$(window).scrollTop($(window).scrollTop() + 34);
});
This obviously will take effect in all browsers, but it prevents it breaking in iOS.
This issue is really annoying.
I combined some of the above mentioned techniques and came up with this:
$(document).on('focus', 'input, textarea', function() {
$('.YOUR-FIXED-DIV').css('position', 'static');
});
$(document).on('blur', 'input, textarea', function() {
setTimeout(function() {
$('.YOUR-FIXED-DIV').css('position', 'fixed');
$('body').css('height', '+=1').css('height', '-=1');
}, 100);
});
I have two fixed navbars (header and footer, using twitter bootstrap).
Both acted weird when the keyboard is up and weird again after keyboard is down.
With this timed/delayed fix it works. I still find a glitch once in a while, but it seems to be good enough for showing it to the client.
Let me know if this works for you. If not we might can find something else. Thanks.
I was experiencing same issue with iOS7. Bottom fixed elements would mess up my view not focus properly.
All started working when I added this meta tag to my html.
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width,initial-scale=1.0,maximum-scale=1.0,user-scalable=no,height=device-height" >
The part which made the difference was:
height=device-height
Hope that helps someone.
I've taken Jory Cunningham answer and improved it:
In many cases, it's not just one element who goes crazy, but several fixed positioned elements, so in this case, targetElem should be a jQuery object which has all the fixed elements you wish to "fix". Ho, this seems to make the iOS keyboard go away if you scroll...
Needless to mention you should use this AFTER document DOM ready event or just before the closing </body> tag.
(function(){
var targetElem = $('.fixedElement'), // or more than one
$doc = $(document),
offsetY, scrollY, changeY;
if( !targetElem.length || !navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone|iPad|iPod/i) )
return;
$doc.on('focus.iOSKeyboardFix', 'input, textarea, [contenteditable]', bind);
function bind(){
$(window).on('scroll.iOSKeyboardFix', react);
react();
}
function react(){
offsetY = targetElem.offset().top;
scrollY = $(window).scrollTop();
changeY = offsetY - scrollY;
targetElem.css({'top':'-'+ changeY +'px'});
// Instead of the above, I personally just do:
// targetElem.css('opacity', 0);
$doc.on('blur.iOSKeyboardFix', 'input, textarea, [contenteditable]', unbind)
.on('touchend.iOSKeyboardFix', unbind);
}
function unbind(){
targetElem.removeAttr('style');
document.activeElement.blur();
$(window).off('scroll.iOSKeyboardFix');
$doc.off('touchend.iOSKeyboardFix blur.iOSKeyboardFix');
}
})();
I have a solution similar to #NealJMD except mine only executes for iOS and correctly determines the scroll offset by measuring the scollTop before and after the native keyboard scrolling as well as using setTimeout to allow the native scrolling to occur:
var $window = $(window);
var initialScroll = $window.scrollTop();
if (navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone|iPad|iPod/i)) {
setTimeout(function () {
$window.scrollTop($window.scrollTop() + (initialScroll - $window.scrollTop()));
}, 0);
}
I have fixed my Ipad main layout content fixed position this way:
var mainHeight;
var main = $('.main');
// hack to detects the virtual keyboard close action and fix the layout bug of fixed elements not being re-flowed
function mainHeightChanged() {
$('body').scrollTop(0);
}
window.setInterval(function () {
if (mainHeight !== main.height())mainHeightChanged();
mainHeight = main.height();
}, 100);
I had a similar problem to #ds111 s. My website was pushed up by the keyboard but didn't move down when the keyboard closed.
First I tried #ds111 solution but I had two input fields. Of course, first the keyboard goes away, then the blur happens (or something like that). So the second input was under the keyboard, when the focus switched directly from one input to the other.
Furthermore, the "jump up" wasn't good enough for me as the whole page only has the size of the ipad. So I made the scroll smooth.
Finally, I had to attach the event listener to all inputs, even those, that were currently hidden, hence the live.
All together I can explain the following javascript snippet as:
Attach the following blur event listener to the current and all future input and textarea (=live): Wait a grace period (= window.setTimeout(..., 10)) and smoothly scroll to top (= animate({scrollTop: 0}, ...)) but only if "no keyboard is shown" (= if($('input:focus, textarea:focus').length == 0)).
$('input, textarea').live('blur', function(event) {
window.setTimeout(function() {
if($('input:focus, textarea:focus').length == 0) {
$("html, body").animate({ scrollTop: 0 }, 400);
}
}, 10)
})
Be aware, that the grace period (= 10) may be too short or the keyboard may still be shown although no input or textarea is focused. Of course, if you want the scrolling faster or slower, you may adjust the duration (= 400)
really worked hard to find this workaround, which in short looks for focus and blur events on inputs, and scrolling to selectively change the positioning of the fixed bar when the events happen. This is bulletproof, and covers all cases (navigating with <>, scroll, done button). Note id="nav" is my fixed footer div. You can easily port this to standard js, or jquery. This is dojo for those who use power tools ;-)
define([
"dojo/ready",
"dojo/query",
], function(ready, query){
ready(function(){
/* This addresses the dreaded "fixed footer floating when focusing inputs and keybard is shown" on iphone
*
*/
if(navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone/i)){
var allInputs = query('input,textarea,select');
var d = document, navEl = "nav";
allInputs.on('focus', function(el){
d.getElementById(navEl).style.position = "static";
});
var fixFooter = function(){
if(d.activeElement.tagName == "BODY"){
d.getElementById(navEl).style.position = "fixed";
}
};
allInputs.on('blur', fixFooter);
var b = d.body;
b.addEventListener("touchend", fixFooter );
}
});
}); //end define
This is a difficult problem to get 'right'. You can try and hide the footer on input element focus, and show on blur, but that isn't always reliable on iOS. Every so often (one time in ten, say, on my iPhone 4S) the focus event seems to fail to fire (or maybe there is a race condition), and the footer does not get hidden.
After much trial and error, I came up with this interesting solution:
<head>
...various JS and CSS imports...
<script type="text/javascript">
document.write( '<style>#footer{visibility:hidden}#media(min-height:' + ($( window ).height() - 10) + 'px){#footer{visibility:visible}}</style>' );
</script>
</head>
Essentially: use JavaScript to determine the window height of the device, then dynamically create a CSS media query to hide the footer when the height of the window shrinks by 10 pixels. Because opening the keyboard resizes the browser display, this never fails on iOS. Because it's using the CSS engine rather than JavaScript, it's much faster and smoother too!
Note: I found using 'visibility:hidden' less glitchy than 'display:none' or 'position:static', but your mileage may vary.
Works for me
if (navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone|iPad|iPod/i)) {
$(document).on('focus', 'input, textarea', function() {
$('header').css({'position':'static'});
});
$(document).on('blur', 'input, textarea', function() {
$('header').css({'position':'fixed'});
});
}
In our case this would fix itself as soon as user scrolls. So this is the fix we've been using to simulate a scroll on blur on any input or textarea:
$(document).on('blur', 'input, textarea', function () {
setTimeout(function () {
window.scrollTo(document.body.scrollLeft, document.body.scrollTop);
}, 0);
});
My answer is that it can't be done.
I see 25 answers but none work in my case. That's why Yahoo and other pages hide the fixed header when the keyboard is on. And Bing turns the whole page non-scrollable (overflow-y: hidden).
The cases discussed above are different, some have issues when scrolling, some on focus or blur. Some have fixed footer, or header. I can't test now each combination, but you might end up realizing that it can't be done in your case.
Found this solution on Github.
https://github.com/Simbul/baker/issues/504#issuecomment-12821392
Make sure you have scrollable content.
// put in your .js file
$(window).load(function(){
window.scrollTo(0, 1);
});
// min-height set for scrollable content
<div id="wrap" style="min-height: 480px">
// website goes here
</div>
The address bar folds up as an added bonus.
In case anyone wanted to try this. I got the following working for me on a fixed footer with an inputfield in it.
<script>
$('document').ready(
function() {
if (navigator.userAgent.match(/Android/i) || navigator.userAgent.match(/webOS/i) || navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone/i) || navigator.userAgent.match(/iPad/i)
|| navigator.userAgent.match(/iPod/i) || navigator.userAgent.match(/BlackBerry/i) || navigator.userAgent.match(/Windows Phone/i)) {
var windowHeight = $(window).height();
var documentHeight = $(document).height();
$('#notes').live('focus', function() {
if (documentHeight > windowHeight) {
$('#controlsContainer').css({
position : 'absolute'
});
$("html, body").animate({
scrollTop : $(document).height()
}, 1);
}
});
$('#notes').live('blur', function() {
$('#controlsContainer').css({
position : 'fixed'
});
$("html, body").animate({
scrollTop : 0
}, 1);
});
}
});
</script>
I have the same issue. But I realized that the fixed position is just delayed and not broken (at least for me). Wait 5-10 seconds and see if the div adjusts back to the bottom of the screen. I believe it's not an error but a delayed response when the keyboard is open.
I tried all the approaches from this thread, but if they didn't help, they did even worse.
In the end, I decided force device to loose focus:
$(<selector to your input field>).focus(function(){
var $this = $(this);
if (<user agent target check>) {
function removeFocus () {
$(<selector to some different interactive element>).focus();
$(window).off('resize', removeFocus);
}
$(window).on('resize', removeFocus);
}
});
and it worked like a charm and fixed my sticky login-form.
Please NOTE:
The JS code above is only to present my idea, to execute this snippet please replace values in angular braces (<>) with appropriate values for your situation.
This code is designed to work with jQuery v1.10.2
This is still a large bug for for any HTML pages with taller Bootstrap Modals in iOS 8.3. None of the proposed solutions above worked and after zooming in on any field below the fold of a tall modal, Mobile Safari and/or WkWebView would move the fixed elements to where the HTML body's scroll was situated, leaving them misaligned with where they actually where laid out.
To workaround the bug, add an event listener to any of your modal inputs like:
$(select.modal).blur(function(){
$('body').scrollTop(0);
});
I'm guessing this works because forcing the HTML body's scroll height re-aligns the actual view with where the iOS 8 WebView expects the fixed modal div's contents to be.
If anybody was looking for a completely different route (like you are not even looking to pin this "footer" div as you scroll but you just want the div to stay at the bottom of the page), you can just set the footer position as relative.
That means that even if the virtual keyboard comes up on your mobile browser, your footer will just stay anchored to the bottom of the page, not trying to react to virtual keyboard show or close.
Obviously it looks better on Safari if position is fixed and the footer follows the page as you scroll up or down but due to this weird bug on Chrome, we ended up switching over to just making the footer relative.
None of the scrolling solutions seemed to work for me. Instead, what worked is to set the position of the body to fixed while the user is editing text and then restore it to static when the user is done. This keeps safari from scrolling your content on you. You can do this either on focus/blur of the element(s) (shown below for a single element but could be for all input, textareas), or if a user is doing something to begin editing like opening a modal, you can do it on that action (e.g. modal open/close).
$("#myInput").on("focus", function () {
$("body").css("position", "fixed");
});
$("#myInput").on("blur", function () {
$("body").css("position", "static");
});
iOS9 - same problem.
TLDR - source of the problem. For solution, scroll to bottom
I had a form in a position:fixed iframe with id='subscribe-popup-frame'
As per the original question, on input focus the iframe would go to the top of the document as opposed to the top of the screen.
The same problem did not occur in safari dev mode with user agent set to an idevice. So it seems the problem is caused by iOS virtual keyboard when it pops up.
I got some visibility into what was happening by console logging the iframe's position (e.g. $('#subscribe-popup-frame', window.parent.document).position() ) and from there I could see iOS seemed to be setting the position of the element to {top: -x, left: 0} when the virtual keyboard popped up (i.e. focussed on the input element).
So my solution was to take that pesky -x, reverse the sign and then use jQuery to add that top position back to the iframe. If there is a better solution I would love to hear it but after trying a dozen different approaches it was the only one that worked for me.
Drawback: I needed to set a timeout of 500ms (maybe less would work but I wanted to be safe) to make sure I captured the final x value after iOS had done its mischief with the position of the element. As a result, the experience is very jerky . . . but at least it works
Solution
var mobileInputReposition = function(){
//if statement is optional, I wanted to restrict this script to mobile devices where the problem arose
if(screen.width < 769){
setTimeout(function(){
var parentFrame = $('#subscribe-popup-frame',window.parent.document);
var parentFramePosFull = parentFrame.position();
var parentFramePosFlip = parentFramePosFull['top'] * -1;
parentFrame.css({'position' : 'fixed', 'top' : parentFramePosFlip + 'px'});
},500);
}
}
Then just call mobileInputReposition in something like $('your-input-field).focus(function(){}) and $('your-input-field).blur(function(){})

Facebook Application iFrame Fixed Element

I would like to have a fixed element (a DIV) in the iFrame for my Facebook Application. So when the user scrolls down the page, that element is still fixed on the top of the browser window?
The basic: You add stuff to a bag, while you are scrolling down, and a fixed DIV will show you your "score" while you add these things to the bag. The "score counter" should always be visible while scrolling.
Thank you!
This is not possible if you are using facebook's iframe auto-resize features. Once the iframe is resized so that scrolling is not necessary, the only scroll available will be the one of the parent window. However, the child iframe has no information about the scroll of the parent window (since they are not on the same domain...) and trying to listen to scroll events or scroll position will only return that the scrollbar is at position 0, or topmost.
You can however listen to click events and extract the offset of the click event or the clicked element.
Some examples:
$('.clickme').click(function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
var top;
// Using click position (e.pageY and e.pageX available)
top = e.pageY;
// Using clicked element position
top = $(this).offset().top;
$('#moveme').css({'top': top - 100 + 'px'}); //
}
Maybe you can base your interaction on this principle instead?
I don't know about you Erik but this really doens not help me much.
Could FB.Canvas.getPageInfo help?
Maybe that would help : I was ussing
(function() {
var el = $("header:first");
var elpos_original = el.offset().top;
$(window).scroll(function(){
var elpos = el.offset().top;
var windowpos = $(window).scrollTop();
var finaldestination = windowpos;
if(windowpos<elpos_original) {
finaldestination = elpos_original;
el.stop().css({'top':0});
} else {
el.stop().animate({'top':finaldestination-elpos_original},0);
}
});
})();