The height in portrait and the height in landscape measured in points.
I used the following approach for determining the frame of the keyboard in iOS 7.1.
In the init method of my view controller, I registered for the UIKeyboardDidShowNotification
:
NSNotificationCenter *center = [NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter];
[center addObserver:self selector:@selector(keyboardOnScreen:) name:UIKeyboardDidShowNotification object:nil];
Then, I used the following code in keyboardOnScreen:
to gain access to the frame of the keyboard. This code gets the userInfo
dictionary from the notification and then accesses the NSValue
associated with UIKeyboardFrameEndUserInfoKey
. You can then access the CGRect and convert it to the coordinates of the view of your view controller. From there, you can perform any calculations you need based on that frame.
-(void)keyboardOnScreen:(NSNotification *)notification
{
NSDictionary *info = notification.userInfo;
NSValue *value = info[UIKeyboardFrameEndUserInfoKey];
CGRect rawFrame = [value CGRectValue];
CGRect keyboardFrame = [self.view convertRect:rawFrame fromView:nil];
NSLog(@"keyboardFrame: %@", NSStringFromCGRect(keyboardFrame));
}
Swift
And the equivalent implementation with Swift:
NotificationCenter.default.addObserver(self, selector: #selector(keyboardDidShow), name: UIResponder.keyboardDidShowNotification, object: nil)
@objc
func keyboardDidShow(notification: Notification) {
guard let info = notification.userInfo else { return }
guard let frameInfo = info[UIResponder.keyboardFrameEndUserInfoKey] as? NSValue else { return }
let keyboardFrame = frameInfo.cgRectValue
print("keyboardFrame: \(keyboardFrame)")
}