UITableView within UIScrollView using autolayout

Matt Delves picture Matt Delves · Jun 27, 2013 · Viewed 40.5k times · Source

At the moment, I'm using a UITableView along with other views that are contained in a UIScrollView. I want the UITableView to have its height to be the same as its content height.

To complicate things, I'm also inserting / deleting rows to provide an accordion effect so that when the user taps on a row, it will show more detail for that row.

I've got the insert / deletion done, though at the moment it doesn't update the UIScrollView which is its superview so that the content size of the UIScrollView is recalculated and the UITableView along with other views in the UIScrollView are displayed correctly.

How can I go about implementing this so that UIScrollView's size is adjusted and its contents laid out correctly when I change the content of the UITableView? I'm currently using auto layout.

Answer

rob mayoff picture rob mayoff · Jun 27, 2013

First of all, are those other views (siblings of the table view) strictly above and below the table view? If so, have you considered letting the table view scroll normally, and putting those outside views in the table view's header and footer views? Then you don't need the scroll view.

Second, you may want to read Technical Note TN2154: UIScrollView And Autolayout if you haven't already.

Third, given the information in that tech note, I can think of a few ways to do what you want. The cleanest is probably to create a subclass of UITableView that implements the intrinsicContentSize method. The implementation is trivial:

@implementation MyTableView

- (CGSize)intrinsicContentSize {
    [self layoutIfNeeded]; // force my contentSize to be updated immediately
    return CGSizeMake(UIViewNoIntrinsicMetric, self.contentSize.height);
}

@end

Then just let auto layout use the table view's intrinsic content size. Create the constraints between the subviews of the scroll view (including the table view) to lay them out, and make sure there are constraints to all four edges of the scroll view.

You probably need to send invalidateIntrinsicContentSize to the table view at appropriate times (when you add or remove rows or change the heights of rows). You could probably just override the appropriate methods in MyTableView to do that. E.g. do [self invalidateIntrinsicContentSize] in -endUpdates, -reloadData, - insertRowsAtIndexPaths:withRowAnimation:, etc.

Here's the result of my testing:

table view with intrinsic content size in scroll view

The scroll view has the light blue background. The red top label and the blue bottom label are siblings of the table view inside the scroll view.

Here's the complete source code for the view controller in my test. There's no xib file.

#import "ViewController.h"
#import "MyTableView.h"

@interface ViewController () <UITableViewDataSource, UITableViewDelegate>

@end

@implementation ViewController

- (void)loadView {
    UIView *view = [[UIView alloc] init];
    self.view = view;

    UIScrollView *scrollView = [[UIScrollView alloc] init];
    scrollView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = NO;
    scrollView.backgroundColor = [UIColor cyanColor];
    [view addSubview:scrollView];

    UILabel *topLabel = [[UILabel alloc] init];
    topLabel.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = NO;
    topLabel.text = @"Top Label";
    topLabel.backgroundColor = [UIColor redColor];
    [scrollView addSubview:topLabel];

    UILabel *bottomLabel = [[UILabel alloc] init];
    bottomLabel.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = NO;
    bottomLabel.text = @"Bottom Label";
    bottomLabel.backgroundColor = [UIColor blueColor];
    [scrollView addSubview:bottomLabel];

    UITableView *tableView = [[MyTableView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectZero style:UITableViewStylePlain];
    tableView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = NO;
    tableView.dataSource = self;
    tableView.delegate = self;
    [scrollView addSubview:tableView];

    UILabel *footer = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, 200, 30)];
    footer.backgroundColor = [UIColor greenColor];
    footer.text = @"Footer";
    tableView.tableFooterView = footer;

    NSDictionary *views = NSDictionaryOfVariableBindings(
        scrollView, topLabel, bottomLabel, tableView);
    [view addConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint
        constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"V:|[scrollView]|"
        options:0 metrics:nil views:views]];
    [view addConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint
        constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"H:|[scrollView]|"
        options:0 metrics:nil views:views]];
    [view addConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint
        constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"V:|[topLabel][tableView][bottomLabel]|"
        options:0 metrics:nil views:views]];
    [view addConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint
        constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"H:|[topLabel]|"
        options:0 metrics:nil views:views]];
    [view addConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint
        constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"H:|-8-[tableView]-8-|"
        options:0 metrics:nil views:views]];
    [view addConstraint:[NSLayoutConstraint
        constraintWithItem:tableView attribute:NSLayoutAttributeWidth
        relatedBy:NSLayoutRelationEqual
        toItem:view attribute:NSLayoutAttributeWidth
        multiplier:1 constant:-16]];
    [view addConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint
        constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"H:|[bottomLabel]|"
        options:0 metrics:nil views:views]];
}

- (NSInteger)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView numberOfRowsInSection:(NSInteger)section {
    return 20;
}

- (UITableViewCell *)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView cellForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
    UITableViewCell *cell = [tableView dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier:@"Cell"];
    if (!cell) {
        cell = [[UITableViewCell alloc] initWithStyle:UITableViewCellStyleDefault reuseIdentifier:@"Cell"];
    }
    cell.textLabel.text = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"Row %d", indexPath.row];
    return cell;
}

@end