I am implementing a view that is in some way similar to what happens in Messages app, so there is a view with UITextView attached to the bottom of the screen and there is also UITableView showing the main content. When it is tapped it slides up with the keyboard and when keyboard is dismissed it slides back to the bottom of the screen.
That part I have and it is working perfectly - I just subscribed to keyboard notifications - will hide and wil show.
The problem is that I have set keyboard dismiss mode on UITableView to interactive and I cannot capture changes to keyboard when it is panning.
The second problem is that this bar with uitextview is covering some part of uitableview. How to fix this? I still want the uitableview to be "under" this bar just like in messages app.
I am using AutoLayout in all places.
Any help will be appreciated!
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EDIT1: Here is some code:
View Hierarchy is as follows:
View - UITableView (this one will contain "messages") - UIView (this one will slide)
UITableView is has constraints to top, left, right and bottom of parent view so it fills whole screen. UIView has constraints to left, right and bottom of parent view so it is glued to the bottom - I moved it by adjusting constant on constraint.
In ViewWillAppear method:
NSNotificationCenter.DefaultCenter.AddObserver (UIKeyboard.DidShowNotification, OnKeyboardDidShowNotification);
NSNotificationCenter.DefaultCenter.AddObserver (UIKeyboard.WillChangeFrameNotification, OnKeyboardDidShowNotification);
NSNotificationCenter.DefaultCenter.AddObserver (UIKeyboard.WillHideNotification, OnKeyboardWillHideNotification);
And here are methods:
void OnKeyboardDidShowNotification (NSNotification notification)
{
AdjustViewToKeyboard (Ui.KeyboardHeightFromNotification (notification), notification);
}
void OnKeyboardWillHideNotification (NSNotification notification)
{
AdjustViewToKeyboard (0.0f, notification);
}
void AdjustViewToKeyboard (float offset, NSNotification notification = null)
{
commentEditViewBottomConstraint.Constant = -offset;
if (notification != null) {
UIView.BeginAnimations (null, IntPtr.Zero);
UIView.SetAnimationDuration (Ui.KeyboardAnimationDurationFromNotification (notification));
UIView.SetAnimationCurve ((UIViewAnimationCurve)Ui.KeyboardAnimationCurveFromNotification (notification));
UIView.SetAnimationBeginsFromCurrentState (true);
}
View.LayoutIfNeeded ();
commentEditView.LayoutIfNeeded ();
var insets = commentsListView.ContentInset;
insets.Bottom = offset;
commentsListView.ContentInset = insets;
if (notification != null) {
UIView.CommitAnimations ();
}
}
I'd recommend you to override -inputAccessoryView property of your view controller and have your editable UITextView as its subview. Also, don't forget to override -canBecomeFirstResponder method to return YES.
- (BOOL)canBecomeFirstResponder
{
if (!RUNNING_ON_IOS7 && !RUNNING_ON_IPAD)
{
//Workaround for iOS6-specific bug
return !(self.viewDisappearing) && (!self.viewAppearing);
}
return !(self.viewDisappearing);
}
With this approach system manages everything.
There are also some workarounds you must know about: for UISplitViewController (UISplitViewController detail-only inputAccessoryView), for deallocation bugs (UIViewController with inputAccessoryView is not deallocated) and so on.