I want to ask that how can I call a method as I do click(touch for start writing) in iphone UITextField, as like we click UIButton and put method in "addTarget", is there any way for UITextFields ?
implement a UITextFieldDelegate and do whatever you want to do in - (BOOL)textFieldShouldBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField or - (void)textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
You should use the first method if you want to stop the textfield from behaving like a textfield. For example if you want to open the textfield editor in a modal view. You can return NO there if you don't want this behavior.
Edit: Here is the code to call myMethod:
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField {
[self myMethod];
return YES;
}
You can set textField's delegate and implement textFieldShouldBeginEditing: method in it - that method will get called when user taps the field and before it goes into editing.
See UITextFieldDelegate reference for more methods available.
[textField addTarget:self action:#selector(myMethod:) forControlEvents:UIControlEventEditingChanged];
-(void) myMethod:(id)sender
{
UITextField* textField = (UITextField *)sender;
}
i think this will help..!!
You can code as,
[YourTextField addTarget:self action:#selector(myMethod:) forControlEvents:UIControlEventEditingDidBegin];
-(void)myMethod
{
[YourTextField resignFirstResponder];
//Do whatever you want
}
Related
in my uitableview in each cell I'm having uitextfield when user edits the textfield and after pressing any other button on the screen the Keyboard is not resigning. I did the following in textfield delegates
- (void)textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
textfieldInCell = textField;
}
-(BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField
{
[textField resignFirstResponder];
textfieldInCell=nil;// this is the ivar i am using for each textfield in cell.
return YES;
}
-(void)textFieldDidEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
textfieldInCell=textField;
// do the process...
textfieldInCell=nil
}
I am also calling the shouldReturn delegate function once the user tapping on any other button but the keyboard is not resigning. Where am I going wrong?
Confirm that you bind the delegate of each textfield that you create with the view controller and add one line of code in textfield did end editing :-
-(void)textFieldDidEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
// add the following line
[textField resignFirstResponder];
textfieldInCell=textField;
// do the process...
textfieldInCell=nil
}
have you bind delegate of textfield with your controller? or did you check textFieldShouldReturn calling or not?
i think, binding is missing wit view controller in your case.
thanks
add a line in your tableview where you are adding textfield.
<YOUR_TEXTFIELD>.delegate = YES;
Enjoy Programming
first check that you give the delegate or not and give the delegate to UITextField after that when you call the method of button at that time resign this textfield like bellow...
-(IBAction)yourButton_Clicked(id)sender{
[yourTextField resignFirstResponder];
////your code write here
}
you must try to assign tag value to textfield then in should return method you used that tag to hide the keyboard like this (if you assign the tag -1 then)
-(void)textFieldDidEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField{
if(textField.tag==-1){
[textField resignFirstResponder];
}
}
I've got a UIViewController with an additional small UIView I created on top of it (subview). When I click a button this view hovers to the center of the screen. The issue is the i've got a UITextField in the additional UIView and i cannot seem to get the return key to work.
Although I set my IBAction to the event "Editing did end" of the text field, when i click the return key, the IBAction doesn't run.
What am I doing wrong?
you just set Your Delegate for example :- yourtextfile.delegate=self; and also dont forget to add delegate method in to .h file
#interface contacts_detailView : UIViewController<UITextFieldDelegate>
and then you delegate textFieldDidEndEditing
- (void)textFieldDidEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
//your new view apear code here
[textField resignFirstResponder];
}
make sure UITextFieldDelegate at interface
Clicking on "Return" doesn't trigger an "Editing did end" event. Only when you'll call resignFirstResponder on the UITextField will you see the event triggered.
What you should do is set your UIViewController as the delegate of the UITextField and implement the method
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField
{
[textField resignFirstResponder];
return YES;
}
First of all, delegate the TextField to the file's owner like this:
yourtextField.delegate = self in your viewDidLoad.
And then add this to the view controller
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField
{
[textField resignFirstResponder];
return YES;
}
It should work.
There is no need to write more code for key board return. Please write this in your .m file , it will work for any number of text field , no need to write again again for different textfield.
use <UItextfieldDelegate> in your .h file. Then make wiring with fileowner in nib file.
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField
{
[self.view endEditing:YES];
return YES;
}
Already the second day and cannot figure out the problem,
I've UITabelView with Custom UICellViews, each custom UICellView consists of UILabel and UITextField.
Custom UICellView object allocs UITextField and UILabel in its init method and are released in dealloc.
The number of custom UICellViews in UITableView is 6.
The user scenario is following
When user clicks from from 1 to 5 UITextFields virtual keyboard opens and user types some text
When user clicks on the 6th UITextField if virtual keyboard is active, it should be hidden, and if it is hidden it shall not be displayed.
As implement UITextFieldDelegate protocol in my UIViewController class and set the delegate of each UITextField to self.
My delegate methods are following
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
if (textField.tag != 6) {
return YES;
} else {
[textField resignFirstResponder];
return NO;
}
}
-(BOOL) textFieldShouldEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField {
[textField resignFirstResponder];
return YES;
}
-(void) textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField {
/* Some code */
}
-(void) textFieldDidEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
[textField resignFirstResponder];
}
All the functions are properly !
So now, the virtual keyboard is never get hidden, why this happens ?
PS. Similar code has worked on iPhone but this issue exists on iPad.
You need to know which textfield was last used! so you can do [lastUsedTextField resignFirstResponder]
There is a dirty, but working trick.. you can make your textfield the new active UITextField and call resignFirstResponder in the next cycle immediately:
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
if (textField.tag != 6) {
return YES;
} else {
// this will schedule keyboard dismissal for the current text field
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
[textField resignFirstResponder];
});
return YES; // -> make this one active
}
}
did you seted action for textField?
[YourTextField addTarget:self action:#selector(textFieldDoneEditing:) forControlEvents:UIControlEventEditingDidEndOnExit];
PS set any selector for any ControlEvent
I'm wondering if there is a way to have the UITextField clear button 'always visible'
textfield.clearButtonMode = UITextFieldViewModeAlways;
doesn't seem to work
.. and if it is possible to dismiss the keyboard using the button?
Thanks in advance.
Like mentioned before it seems apple is setting the textfield focus after you clear the field.
The solution is quite simple. Just clear the field yourself, resignFirstResponder and return NO
-(BOOL)textFieldShouldClear:(UITextField *)textField
{
textField.text = #"";
[textField resignFirstResponder];
return NO;
}
In your delegate, the function
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldClear:(UITextField *)textField
is called when the users wants to clear the textfield. If you return YES and call
[textField resignFirstResponder];
the keyboard should go away. I don't know about the clearButtonMode, other than that you may want to set it early, preferably before adding the view to its superview.
edit To make sure you really resign the responder, try doing it just a little later:
[textField performSelector:#selector(resignFirstResponder) withObject:nil afterDelay:0.1];
The delay didn't work well for me. Instead I added an instance variable to the delegate:
BOOL cancelEdit;
Then in the delegate implementation:
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
if (cancelEdit) {
cancelEdit = NO;
return NO;
} else {
return YES;
}
}
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldClear:(UITextField *)textField
{
cancelEdit = YES;
return YES;
}
UITextFieldDelegate textFieldShouldClear
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldClear:(UITextField *)textField {
[textField] resignFirstResponder];
return YES;
http://developer.apple.com/iphone/library/documentation/uikit/reference/UITextFieldDelegate_Protocol/UITextFieldDelegate/UITextFieldDelegate.html#//apple_ref/occ/intfm/UITextFieldDelegate/textFieldShouldClear:
I discovered this odd behavior was caused by a competing gesture recognizer that resigned the first responder before the keyboard before textFieldShouldClear: was called. It seemed to be corrupting the first responder.
If you've set it up this way, ensure that cancelsTouchesInView on your gesture recognizer is set to YES. This way you shouldn't need to do anything special in the textFieldShouldClear: or textFieldShouldBeginEditing: delegate methods.
How to Hide Keyboard by pressing Returnkey
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.
alt text http://www.thoughtblog.com/imgs/delegate.png
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.returnType = 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.
The keyboard only shows up when something editable (usually a UITextField) has become the first responder. Therefore, to make the keyboard go away, you have to make the textField not be the firstResponder anymore. Fortunately, it's one line of code:
[myTextField resignFirstResponder];
You really need to include more information with your question, but I think this might be what you are looking for:
First, make your view controller implement the UITextFieldDelegate:
#interface MainViewController : UIViewController <UITextFieldDelegate> {
Then add this method to the controller:
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField {
[textField resignFirstResponder];
return YES;
}
Read the UITextFieldDelegate documentation to see what else you can do.
Use these two methods:
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField {
activeTextField = textField;
return YES;
}
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField {
activeTextField = nil;
[txtPassword resignFirstResponder];
[txtUserName resignFirstResponder];
return YES;
}
Please make sure you have given delegates to each textfields. For that you should go to the view. Right click . set the delegate to view.