How to implement a multiline NSTokenField? - objective-c

I want to implement an NSTokenField that spans multiple lines. For example:
Multi-line NSTokenField
I found a some sample code of multi-line NSTokenField on the internet:
IBOutlet NSTokenField *tokenField;
- (void)awakeFromNib
{
[[tokenField cell] setWraps:YES];
}
made my class delegate of the NSTokenField and implement the following method
- (void)controlTextDidChange:(NSNotification *)obj {
NSRect oldTokenFieldFrame = [tokenField frame];
NSRect tokenFieldBounds = [tokenField bounds];
float height = oldTokenFieldFrame.size.height;
tokenFieldBounds.size.height = CGFLOAT_MAX;
NSSize cellSize = [[tokenField cell] cellSizeForBounds:tokenFieldBounds];
float y = oldTokenFieldFrame.origin.y + height - cellSize.height;
[tokenField setFrame:NSMakeRect(oldTokenFieldFrame.origin.x,
y,
oldTokenFieldFrame.size.width,
cellSize.height)];
}
but this code does not work correctly.
Could you please help me with this issue?
Thank you in advance.

For everybody who is just looking for an answer with working code, I've found this super short solution. Here we go:
#import "MyExpandingTokenField.h"
#implementation MyExpandingTokenField
- (NSSize)intrinsicContentSize {
NSSize intrinsicContentSize = [self sizeThatFits:NSMakeSize(self.frame.size.width, CGFLOAT_MAX)];
intrinsicContentSize = NSMakeSize(intrinsicContentSize.width, intrinsicContentSize.height + 5);
return intrinsicContentSize;
}
- (void)textDidChange:(NSNotification *)notification {
[super textDidChange:notification];
[self invalidateIntrinsicContentSize];
}
#end

Related

NSPopover show relative to NSStatusItem

This is my code:
if #available(OSX 10.10, *) {
if let b = statusItem.button {
popover.showRelativeToRect(b.bounds, ofView: b, preferredEdge: .MinY)
}
} else {
}
The else block is for OS X Mavericks because NSStatusItem.button is not available. Is there a simple way of showing the popover relative to the status item? If not, is it possible to show the popover in the center of the screen instead without the arrow?
before you had access to the statusitem button you had to provide your own view. Then all works the same
to retain the original behaviour, draw a custom view that looks like a status item ;)
e.g.
#interface DDQuickMenuStatusItemView : NSView
#property(weak) NSStatusItem *item;
//...
#end
#implementation DDQuickMenuStatusItemView
//...
- (void)drawRect:(NSRect)dirtyRect {
NSImage *image = nil;
if(self.item) {
[self.item drawStatusBarBackgroundInRect:self.bounds withHighlight:NO];
image = self.item.image;
}
if(image) {
NSRect r = self.bounds;
r.size = [image size];
r = [self.class centerRect:r inRect:self.bounds];
r = [self centerScanRect:r];
[image drawInRect:r fromRect:NSZeroRect operation:NSCompositeSourceOver fraction:1];
}
}
#pragma mark -
+ (CGRect)centerRect:(CGRect)rect inRect:(CGRect)inRect
{
CGRect result = rect;
result.origin.x = inRect.origin.x + (inRect.size.width - result.size.width)*0.5f;
result.origin.y = inRect.origin.y + (inRect.size.height - result.size.height)*0.5f;
return result;
}
#end
Note that the view is a sample and not production ready ;)

UITableViewCell with UITextView height in iOS 7?

How can I calculate the height of an UITableViewCell with an UITextView in it in iOS 7?
I found a lot of answers on similar questions, but sizeWithFont: takes part in every solution and this method is deprecated!
I know I have to use - (CGFloat)tableView:heightForRowAtIndexPath: but how do I calculate the height my TextView needs to display the whole text?
First of all, it is very important to note, that there is a big difference between UITextView and UILabel when it comes to how text is rendered. Not only does UITextView have insets on all borders, but also the text layout inside it is slightly different.
Therefore, sizeWithFont: is a bad way to go for UITextViews.
Instead UITextView itself has a function called sizeThatFits: which will return the smallest size needed to display all contents of the UITextView inside a bounding box, that you can specify.
The following will work equally for both iOS 7 and older versions and as of right now does not include any methods, that are deprecated.
Simple Solution
- (CGFloat)textViewHeightForAttributedText: (NSAttributedString*)text andWidth: (CGFloat)width {
UITextView *calculationView = [[UITextView alloc] init];
[calculationView setAttributedText:text];
CGSize size = [calculationView sizeThatFits:CGSizeMake(width, FLT_MAX)];
return size.height;
}
This function will take a NSAttributedString and the desired width as a CGFloat and return the height needed
Detailed Solution
Since I have recently done something similar, I thought I would also share some solutions to the connected Issues I encountered. I hope it will help somebody.
This is far more in depth and will cover the following:
Of course: setting the height of a UITableViewCell based on the size needed to display the full contents of a contained UITextView
Respond to text changes (and animate the height changes of the row)
Keeping the cursor inside the visible area and keeping first responder on the UITextView when resizing the UITableViewCell while editing
If you are working with a static table view or you only have a known number of UITextViews, you can potentially make step 2 much simpler.
1. First, overwrite the heightForRowAtIndexPath:
- (CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
// check here, if it is one of the cells, that needs to be resized
// to the size of the contained UITextView
if ( )
return [self textViewHeightForRowAtIndexPath:indexPath];
else
// return your normal height here:
return 100.0;
}
2. Define the function that calculated the needed height:
Add an NSMutableDictionary (in this example called textViews) as an instance variable to your UITableViewController subclass.
Use this dictionary to store references to the individual UITextViews like so:
(and yes, indexPaths are valid keys for dictionaries)
- (UITableViewCell *)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView cellForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath
{
static NSString *CellIdentifier = #"Cell";
UITableViewCell *cell = [tableView dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier:CellIdentifier forIndexPath:indexPath];
// Do you cell configuring ...
[textViews setObject:cell.textView forKey:indexPath];
[cell.textView setDelegate: self]; // Needed for step 3
return cell;
}
This function will now calculate the actual height:
- (CGFloat)textViewHeightForRowAtIndexPath: (NSIndexPath*)indexPath {
UITextView *calculationView = [textViews objectForKey: indexPath];
CGFloat textViewWidth = calculationView.frame.size.width;
if (!calculationView.attributedText) {
// This will be needed on load, when the text view is not inited yet
calculationView = [[UITextView alloc] init];
calculationView.attributedText = // get the text from your datasource add attributes and insert here
textViewWidth = 290.0; // Insert the width of your UITextViews or include calculations to set it accordingly
}
CGSize size = [calculationView sizeThatFits:CGSizeMake(textViewWidth, FLT_MAX)];
return size.height;
}
3. Enable Resizing while Editing
For the next two functions, it is important, that the delegate of the UITextViews is set to your UITableViewController. If you need something else as the delegate, you can work around it by making the relevant calls from there or using the appropriate NSNotificationCenter hooks.
- (void)textViewDidChange:(UITextView *)textView {
[self.tableView beginUpdates]; // This will cause an animated update of
[self.tableView endUpdates]; // the height of your UITableViewCell
// If the UITextView is not automatically resized (e.g. through autolayout
// constraints), resize it here
[self scrollToCursorForTextView:textView]; // OPTIONAL: Follow cursor
}
4. Follow cursor while Editing
- (void)textViewDidBeginEditing:(UITextView *)textView {
[self scrollToCursorForTextView:textView];
}
This will make the UITableView scroll to the position of the cursor, if it is not inside the visible Rect of the UITableView:
- (void)scrollToCursorForTextView: (UITextView*)textView {
CGRect cursorRect = [textView caretRectForPosition:textView.selectedTextRange.start];
cursorRect = [self.tableView convertRect:cursorRect fromView:textView];
if (![self rectVisible:cursorRect]) {
cursorRect.size.height += 8; // To add some space underneath the cursor
[self.tableView scrollRectToVisible:cursorRect animated:YES];
}
}
5. Adjust visible rect, by setting insets
While editing, parts of your UITableView may be covered by the Keyboard. If the tableviews insets are not adjusted, scrollToCursorForTextView: will not be able to scroll to your cursor, if it is at the bottom of the tableview.
- (void)keyboardWillShow:(NSNotification*)aNotification {
NSDictionary* info = [aNotification userInfo];
CGSize kbSize = [[info objectForKey:UIKeyboardFrameBeginUserInfoKey] CGRectValue].size;
UIEdgeInsets contentInsets = UIEdgeInsetsMake(self.tableView.contentInset.top, 0.0, kbSize.height, 0.0);
self.tableView.contentInset = contentInsets;
self.tableView.scrollIndicatorInsets = contentInsets;
}
- (void)keyboardWillHide:(NSNotification*)aNotification {
[UIView beginAnimations:nil context:nil];
[UIView setAnimationDuration:0.35];
UIEdgeInsets contentInsets = UIEdgeInsetsMake(self.tableView.contentInset.top, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0);
self.tableView.contentInset = contentInsets;
self.tableView.scrollIndicatorInsets = contentInsets;
[UIView commitAnimations];
}
And last part:
Inside your view did load, sign up for the Notifications for Keyboard changes through NSNotificationCenter:
- (void)viewDidLoad
{
[super viewDidLoad];
[[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter] addObserver:self selector:#selector(keyboardWillShow:) name:UIKeyboardWillShowNotification object:nil];
[[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter] addObserver:self selector:#selector(keyboardWillHide:) name:UIKeyboardWillHideNotification object:nil];
}
Please don't get mad at me, for making this answer so long. While not all of it is needed to answer the question, I believe that there are other people who these directly related issues will be helpful to.
UPDATE:
As Dave Haupert pointed out, I forgot to include the rectVisible function:
- (BOOL)rectVisible: (CGRect)rect {
CGRect visibleRect;
visibleRect.origin = self.tableView.contentOffset;
visibleRect.origin.y += self.tableView.contentInset.top;
visibleRect.size = self.tableView.bounds.size;
visibleRect.size.height -= self.tableView.contentInset.top + self.tableView.contentInset.bottom;
return CGRectContainsRect(visibleRect, rect);
}
Also I noticed, that scrollToCursorForTextView: still included a direct reference to one of the TextFields in my project. If you have a problem with bodyTextView not being found, check the updated version of the function.
There is a new function to replace sizeWithFont, which is boundingRectWithSize.
I added the following function to my project, which makes use of the new function on iOS7 and the old one on iOS lower than 7. It has basically the same syntax as sizeWithFont:
-(CGSize)text:(NSString*)text sizeWithFont:(UIFont*)font constrainedToSize:(CGSize)size{
if(IOS_NEWER_OR_EQUAL_TO_7){
NSDictionary *attributesDictionary = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:
font, NSFontAttributeName,
nil];
CGRect frame = [text boundingRectWithSize:size
options:(NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin | NSStringDrawingUsesFontLeading)
attributes:attributesDictionary
context:nil];
return frame.size;
}else{
#pragma clang diagnostic push
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wdeprecated-declarations"
return [text sizeWithFont:font constrainedToSize:size];
#pragma clang diagnostic pop
}
}
You can add that IOS_NEWER_OR_EQUAL_TO_7 on your prefix.pch file in your project as:
#define IOS_NEWER_OR_EQUAL_TO_7 ( [ [ [ UIDevice currentDevice ] systemVersion ] floatValue ] >= 7.0 )
If you're using UITableViewAutomaticDimension I have a really simple (iOS 8 only) solution. In my case it's a static table view, but i guess you could adapt this for dynamic prototypes...
I have a constraint outlet for the text-view's height and I have implemented the following methods like this:
// Outlets
#property (weak, nonatomic) IBOutlet UITextView *textView;
#property (weak, nonatomic) IBOutlet NSLayoutConstraint *textViewHeight;
// Implementation
#pragma mark - Private Methods
- (void)updateTextViewHeight {
self.textViewHeight.constant = self.textView.contentSize.height + self.textView.contentInset.top + self.textView.contentInset.bottom;
}
#pragma mark - View Controller Overrides
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
[self updateTextViewHeight];
}
#pragma mark - TableView Delegate & Datasource
- (CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView estimatedHeightForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
return 80;
}
- (CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
return UITableViewAutomaticDimension;
}
#pragma mark - TextViewDelegate
- (void)textViewDidChange:(UITextView *)textView {
[self.tableView beginUpdates];
[self updateTextViewHeight];
[self.tableView endUpdates];
}
But remember: the text view must be scrollable, and you must setup your constraints such that they work for automatic dimension:
setup all the view in the cell in relation to each other, with fixed heights (including the text view height, which you will change programatically)
the top most view has the top spacing and the bottom most view has the bottom spacing to the super view;
The most basic cell example is:
no other views in the cell except the textview
0 margins around all sides of the text view and a predefined height constraint for the text view.
Tim Bodeit's answer is great. I used the code of Simple Solution to correctly get the height of the text view, and use that height in heightForRowAtIndexPath. But I don't use the rest of the answer to resize the text view. Instead, I write code to change the frame of text view in cellForRowAtIndexPath.
Everything is working in iOS 6 and below, but in iOS 7 the text in text view cannot be fully shown even though the frame of text view is indeed resized. (I'm not using Auto Layout). It should be the reason that in iOS 7 there's TextKit and the position of the text is controlled by NSTextContainer in UITextView. So in my case I need to add a line to set the someTextView in order to make it work correctly in iOS 7.
if (SYSTEM_VERSION_GREATER_THAN_OR_EQUAL_TO(#"7.0")) {
someTextView.textContainer.heightTracksTextView = YES;
}
As the documentation said, what that property does is:
Controls whether the receiver adjusts the height of its bounding
rectangle when its text view is resized. Default value: NO.
If leave it with the default value, after resize the frame of someTextView, the size of the textContainer is not changed, leading to the result that the text can only be displayed in the area before resizing.
And maybe it is needed to set the scrollEnabled = NO in case there's more than one textContainer, so that the text will reflow from one textContainer to the another.
Here is one more solution that aims at simplicity and quick prototyping:
Setup:
Table with prototype cells.
Each cell contains dynamic sized UITextView w/ other contents.
Prototype cells are associated with TableCell.h.
UITableView is associated with TableViewController.h.
Solution:
(1) Add to TableViewController.m:
// This is the method that determines the height of each cell.
- (CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath
{
// I am using a helper method here to get the text at a given cell.
NSString *text = [self getTextAtIndex:indexPath];
// Getting the height needed by the dynamic text view.
CGSize size = [self frameForText:text sizeWithFont:nil constrainedToSize:CGSizeMake(300.f, CGFLOAT_MAX)];
// Return the size of the current row.
// 80 is the minimum height! Update accordingly - or else, cells are going to be too thin.
return size.height + 80;
}
// Think of this as some utility function that given text, calculates how much
// space would be needed to fit that text.
- (CGSize)frameForText:(NSString *)text sizeWithFont:(UIFont *)font constrainedToSize:(CGSize)size
{
NSDictionary *attributesDictionary = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:
font, NSFontAttributeName,
nil];
CGRect frame = [text boundingRectWithSize:size
options:(NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin | NSStringDrawingUsesFontLeading)
attributes:attributesDictionary
context:nil];
// This contains both height and width, but we really care about height.
return frame.size;
}
// Think of this as a source for the text to be rendered in the text view.
// I used a dictionary to map indexPath to some dynamically fetched text.
- (NSString *) getTextAtIndex: (NSIndexPath *) indexPath
{
return #"This is stubbed text - update it to return the text of the text view.";
}
(2) Add to TableCell.m:
// This method will be called when the cell is initialized from the storyboard
// prototype.
- (void)awakeFromNib
{
// Assuming TextView here is the text view in the cell.
TextView.scrollEnabled = YES;
}
Explanation:
So what's happening here is this: each text view is bound to the height of the table cells by vertical and horizontal constraints - that means when the table cell height increases, the text view increases its size as well. I used a modified version of #manecosta's code to calculate the required height of a text view to fit the given text in a cell. So that means given a text with X number of characters, frameForText: will return a size which will have a property size.height that matches the text view's required height.
Now, all that remains is the update the cell's height to match the required text view's height. And this is achieved at heightForRowAtIndexPath:. As noted in the comments, since size.height is only the height for the text view and not the entire cell, there should be some offset added to it. In the case of the example, this value was 80.
One approach if you're using autolayout is to let the autolayout engine calculate the size for you. This isn't the most efficient approach but it is pretty convenient (and arguably the most accurate). It becomes more convenient as the complexity of the cell layout grows - e.g. suddenly you have two or more textviews/fields in the cell.
I answered a similar question with a complete sample for sizing tableview cells using auto layout, here:
How to resize superview to fit all subviews with autolayout?
The complete smooth solution is as follows.
First, we need the cell class with a textView
#protocol TextInputTableViewCellDelegate <NSObject>
#optional
- (void)textInputTableViewCellTextWillChange:(TextInputTableViewCell *)cell;
- (void)textInputTableViewCellTextDidChange:(TextInputTableViewCell *)cell;
#end
#interface TextInputTableViewCell : UITableViewCell
#property (nonatomic, weak) id<TextInputTableViewCellDelegate> delegate;
#property (nonatomic, readonly) UITextView *textView;
#property (nonatomic) NSInteger minLines;
#property (nonatomic) CGFloat lastRelativeFrameOriginY;
#end
#import "TextInputTableViewCell.h"
#interface TextInputTableViewCell () <UITextViewDelegate> {
NSLayoutConstraint *_heightConstraint;
}
#property (nonatomic) UITextView *textView;
#end
#implementation TextInputTableViewCell
- (id)initWithStyle:(UITableViewCellStyle)style reuseIdentifier:(NSString *)reuseIdentifier {
self = [super initWithStyle:style reuseIdentifier:reuseIdentifier];
if (self) {
self.selectionStyle = UITableViewCellSelectionStyleNone;
_textView = [UITextView new];
_textView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = NO;
_textView.delegate = self;
_textView.scrollEnabled = NO;
_textView.font = CELL_REG_FONT;
_textView.textContainer.lineFragmentPadding = 0.0;
_textView.textContainerInset = UIEdgeInsetsZero;
[self.contentView addSubview:_textView];
[self.contentView addConstraints: [NSLayoutConstraint constraintsWithVisualFormat:#"H:|-[view]-|" options:nil metrics:nil views:#{#"view": _textView}]];
[self.contentView addConstraints: [NSLayoutConstraint constraintsWithVisualFormat:#"V:|-[view]-|" options:nil metrics:nil views:#{#"view": _textView}]];
_heightConstraint = [NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem: _textView
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeHeight
relatedBy: NSLayoutRelationGreaterThanOrEqual
toItem: nil
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeNotAnAttribute
multiplier: 0.0
constant: (_textView.font.lineHeight + 15)];
_heightConstraint.priority = UILayoutPriorityRequired - 1;
[_textView addConstraint:_heightConstraint];
}
return self;
}
- (void)prepareForReuse {
[super prepareForReuse];
self.minLines = 1;
}
- (void)setMinLines:(NSInteger)minLines {
_heightConstraint.constant = minLines * _textView.font.lineHeight + 15;
}
- (BOOL)textView:(UITextView *)textView shouldChangeTextInRange:(NSRange)range replacementText:(NSString *)text {
if ([self.delegate respondsToSelector:#selector(textInputTableViewCellTextWillChange:)]) {
[self.delegate textInputTableViewCellTextWillChange:self];
}
return YES;
}
- (void)textViewDidChange:(UITextView *)textView {
if ([self.delegate respondsToSelector:#selector(textInputTableViewCellTextDidChange:)]) {
[self.delegate textInputTableViewCellTextDidChange:self];
}
}
Next, we use it in the TableViewController
#interface SomeTableViewController () <TextInputTableViewCellDelegate>
#end
#implementation SomeTableViewController
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
- (UITableViewCell *)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView cellForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
TextInputTableViewCell *cell = [tableView dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier: TextInputTableViewCellIdentifier forIndexPath:indexPath];
cell.delegate = self;
cell.minLines = 3;
. . . . . . . . . .
return cell;
}
- (CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView estimatedHeightForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
return UITableViewAutomaticDimension;
}
- (CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
return UITableViewAutomaticDimension;
}
- (void)textInputTableViewCellWillChange:(TextInputTableViewCell *)cell {
cell.lastRelativeFrameOriginY = cell.frame.origin.y - self.tableView.contentOffset.y;
}
- (void)textInputTableViewCellTextDidChange:(TextInputTableViewCell *)cell {
NSIndexPath *indexPath = [self.tableView indexPathForCell:cell];
[UIView performWithoutAnimation:^{
[self.tableView moveRowAtIndexPath:indexPath toIndexPath:indexPath];
}];
CGFloat contentOffsetY = cell.frame.origin.y - cell.lastRelativeFrameOriginY;
self.tableView.contentOffset = CGPointMake(self.tableView.contentOffset.x, contentOffsetY);
CGRect caretRect = [cell.textView caretRectForPosition:cell.textView.selectedTextRange.start];
caretRect = [self.tableView convertRect:caretRect fromView:cell.textView];
CGRect visibleRect = self.tableView.bounds;
visibleRect.origin.y += self.tableView.contentInset.top;
visibleRect.size.height -= self.tableView.contentInset.top + self.tableView.contentInset.bottom;
BOOL res = CGRectContainsRect(visibleRect, caretRect);
if (!res) {
caretRect.size.height += 5;
[self.tableView scrollRectToVisible:caretRect animated:NO];
}
}
#end
Here minLines allows to set minimum height for the textView (to
resist height minimizing by AutoLayout with
UITableViewAutomaticDimension).
moveRowAtIndexPath:indexPath: with the same indexPath starts
tableViewCell height re-calculation and re-layout.
performWithoutAnimation: removes side-effect (tableView content
offset jumping on starting new line while typing).
It is important to preserve relativeFrameOriginY (not
contentOffsetY!) during cell update because contentSize of the
cells before the current cell could be change by autoLayout calculus
in unexpected way. It removes visual jumps on system hyphenation
while typing long words.
Note that you shouldn't set the property estimatedRowHeight! The
following doesn't work
self.tableView.estimatedRowHeight = UITableViewAutomaticDimension;
Use only tableViewDelegate method.
==========================================================================
If one doesn't mind against weak binding between tableView and tableViewCell and updating geometry of the tableView from tableViewCell, it is possible to upgrade TextInputTableViewCell class above:
#interface TextInputTableViewCell : UITableViewCell
#property (nonatomic, weak) id<TextInputTableViewCellDelegate> delegate;
#property (nonatomic, weak) UITableView *tableView;
#property (nonatomic, readonly) UITextView *textView;
#property (nonatomic) NSInteger minLines;
#end
#import "TextInputTableViewCell.h"
#interface TextInputTableViewCell () <UITextViewDelegate> {
NSLayoutConstraint *_heightConstraint;
CGFloat _lastRelativeFrameOriginY;
}
#property (nonatomic) UITextView *textView;
#end
#implementation TextInputTableViewCell
- (id)initWithStyle:(UITableViewCellStyle)style reuseIdentifier:(NSString *)reuseIdentifier {
self = [super initWithStyle:style reuseIdentifier:reuseIdentifier];
if (self) {
self.selectionStyle = UITableViewCellSelectionStyleNone;
_textView = [UITextView new];
_textView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = NO;
_textView.delegate = self;
_textView.scrollEnabled = NO;
_textView.font = CELL_REG_FONT;
_textView.textContainer.lineFragmentPadding = 0.0;
_textView.textContainerInset = UIEdgeInsetsZero;
[self.contentView addSubview:_textView];
[self.contentView addConstraints: [NSLayoutConstraint constraintsWithVisualFormat:#"H:|-[view]-|" options:nil metrics:nil views:#{#"view": _textView}]];
[self.contentView addConstraints: [NSLayoutConstraint constraintsWithVisualFormat:#"V:|-[view]-|" options:nil metrics:nil views:#{#"view": _textView}]];
_heightConstraint = [NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem: _textView
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeHeight
relatedBy: NSLayoutRelationGreaterThanOrEqual
toItem: nil
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeNotAnAttribute
multiplier: 0.0
constant: (_textView.font.lineHeight + 15)];
_heightConstraint.priority = UILayoutPriorityRequired - 1;
[_textView addConstraint:_heightConstraint];
}
return self;
}
- (void)prepareForReuse {
[super prepareForReuse];
self.minLines = 1;
self.tableView = nil;
}
- (void)setMinLines:(NSInteger)minLines {
_heightConstraint.constant = minLines * _textView.font.lineHeight + 15;
}
- (BOOL)textView:(UITextView *)textView shouldChangeTextInRange:(NSRange)range replacementText:(NSString *)text {
_lastRelativeFrameOriginY = self.frame.origin.y - self.tableView.contentOffset.y;
return YES;
}
- (void)textViewDidChange:(UITextView *)textView {
NSIndexPath *indexPath = [self.tableView indexPathForCell:self];
if (indexPath == nil) return;
[UIView performWithoutAnimation:^{
[self.tableView moveRowAtIndexPath:indexPath toIndexPath:indexPath];
}];
CGFloat contentOffsetY = self.frame.origin.y - _lastRelativeFrameOriginY;
self.tableView.contentOffset = CGPointMake(self.tableView.contentOffset.x, contentOffsetY);
CGRect caretRect = [self.textView caretRectForPosition:self.textView.selectedTextRange.start];
caretRect = [self.tableView convertRect:caretRect fromView:self.textView];
CGRect visibleRect = self.tableView.bounds;
visibleRect.origin.y += self.tableView.contentInset.top;
visibleRect.size.height -= self.tableView.contentInset.top + self.tableView.contentInset.bottom;
BOOL res = CGRectContainsRect(visibleRect, caretRect);
if (!res) {
caretRect.size.height += 5;
[self.tableView scrollRectToVisible:caretRect animated:NO];
}
}
#end
Put UILabel behind your UITextView.
Use this answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/36054679/6681462 to UILabel you created
Give them same constraints and fonts
Set them same text;
Your cell's height will calculate by UILabel's content, but all text will be showed by TextField.
UITextView *txtDescLandscape=[[UITextView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(2,20,310,2)];
txtDescLandscape.editable =NO;
txtDescLandscape.textAlignment =UITextAlignmentLeft;
[txtDescLandscape setFont:[UIFont fontWithName:#"ArialMT" size:15]];
txtDescLandscape.text =[objImage valueForKey:#"imgdescription"];
txtDescLandscape.text =[txtDescLandscape.text stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet]];
[txtDescLandscape sizeToFit];
[headerView addSubview:txtDescLandscape];
CGRect txtViewlandscpframe = txtDescLandscape.frame;
txtViewlandscpframe.size.height = txtDescLandscape.contentSize.height;
txtDescLandscape.frame = txtViewlandscpframe;
i think this way you can count the height of your text view and then resize your tableview cell according to that height so that you can show full text on cell
Swift version
func textViewHeightForAttributedText(text: NSAttributedString, andWidth width: CGFloat) -> CGFloat {
let calculationView = UITextView()
calculationView.attributedText = text
let size = calculationView.sizeThatFits(CGSize(width: width, height: CGFloat.max))
return size.height
}
If you want to automatically adjust UITableViewCell's height based on the height of the inner UITextView's height. See my answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/45890087/1245231
The solution is quite simple and should work since iOS 7. Make sure that the Scrolling Enabled option is turned off for the UITextView inside the UITableViewCell in the StoryBoard.
Then in your UITableViewController's viewDidLoad() set the tableView.rowHeight = UITableViewAutomaticDimension and tableView.estimatedRowHeight > 0 such as:
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
tableView.rowHeight = UITableViewAutomaticDimension
tableView.estimatedRowHeight = 44.0
}
That's it. UITableViewCell's height will be automatically adjusted based on the inner UITextView's height.
For iOS 8 and above you can just use
your_tablview.estimatedrowheight= minheight you want
your_tableview.rowheight=UItableviewautomaticDimension

Implementing a Simple Line Graph in iOS

What would be the best way to implament a simple line graph inside my iPad app. Im only looking to plot 4-8 points and the graph does need to be fancy looking. HTML5 will be good enough to use for what I need.
How would I go about implementing HTML code to plot a line graph?
I have been looking at using Google Charting Tools, but any other suggestions that I could use?
Here is a very basic class that will give you the basic line. It takes an NSArray of NSNumbers for the Y axis. It should provide a good starting point for you as it is as simple as it gets. You might consider adding labels to the points and axis markers to give a sense of scale.
Header:
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
#interface SOGenericGraphView : UIView {
NSArray *yValues;
}
#property (strong, atomic) NSArray *yValues;
#end
Implementation:
#import "SOGenericGraphView.h"
#implementation SOGenericGraphView
#synthesize yValues;
- (id)initWithFrame:(CGRect)frame
{
self = [super initWithFrame:frame];
if (self) {
// Initialization code
self.backgroundColor = [UIColor whiteColor];
}
return self;
}
// Only override drawRect: if you perform custom drawing.
// An empty implementation adversely affects performance during animation.
- (void)drawRect:(CGRect)rect
{
// Drawing code
[super drawRect:rect];
CGRect insetRect = CGRectInset(self.frame, 10, 15);
double maxSpeed = [[yValues valueForKeyPath:#"#max.doubleValue"] doubleValue];
CGFloat yRatio = insetRect.size.height/maxSpeed;
CGFloat xRatio = insetRect.size.width/(yValues.count-1);
UIBezierPath *sparkline = [UIBezierPath bezierPath];
for (int x = 0; x< yValues.count; x++) {
CGPoint newPoint = CGPointMake(x*xRatio + insetRect.origin.x, insetRect.size.height - (yRatio*[[yValues objectAtIndex:x] doubleValue] - insetRect.origin.y));
if (x == 0) {
[sparkline moveToPoint:newPoint];
}
else {
[sparkline addLineToPoint:newPoint];
}
}
[[UIColor redColor] set];
[sparkline stroke];
}
#end

How do I vertically center align text in a NSTextField?

I have an NSTextField and I want to vertically center align the text in it. Basically I need the NSTextField answer of How do I vertically center UITextField Text?
Anyone got some pointers? Thanks!
You could subclass NSTextFieldCell to do what you want:
MDVerticallyCenteredTextFieldCell.h:
#import <Cocoa/Cocoa.h>
#interface MDVerticallyCenteredTextFieldCell : NSTextFieldCell {
}
#end
MDVerticallyCenteredTextFieldCell.m:
#import "MDVerticallyCenteredTextFieldCell.h"
#implementation MDVerticallyCenteredTextFieldCell
- (NSRect)adjustedFrameToVerticallyCenterText:(NSRect)frame {
// super would normally draw text at the top of the cell
NSInteger offset = floor((NSHeight(frame) -
([[self font] ascender] - [[self font] descender])) / 2);
return NSInsetRect(frame, 0.0, offset);
}
- (void)editWithFrame:(NSRect)aRect inView:(NSView *)controlView
editor:(NSText *)editor delegate:(id)delegate event:(NSEvent *)event {
[super editWithFrame:[self adjustedFrameToVerticallyCenterText:aRect]
inView:controlView editor:editor delegate:delegate event:event];
}
- (void)selectWithFrame:(NSRect)aRect inView:(NSView *)controlView
editor:(NSText *)editor delegate:(id)delegate
start:(NSInteger)start length:(NSInteger)length {
[super selectWithFrame:[self adjustedFrameToVerticallyCenterText:aRect]
inView:controlView editor:editor delegate:delegate
start:start length:length];
}
- (void)drawInteriorWithFrame:(NSRect)frame inView:(NSView *)view {
[super drawInteriorWithFrame:
[self adjustedFrameToVerticallyCenterText:frame] inView:view];
}
#end
You can then use a regular NSTextField in Interface Builder, and specify MDVerticallyCenteredTextFieldCell (or whatever you want to name it) as the custom class for the text field's text field cell (select the textfield, pause, then click the textfield again to select the cell inside the text field):
Swift 3.0 version (Create a custom subclass for NSTextFieldCell):
override func drawingRect(forBounds rect: NSRect) -> NSRect {
var newRect = super.drawingRect(forBounds: rect)
let textSize = self.cellSize(forBounds: rect)
let heightDelta = newRect.size.height - textSize.height
if heightDelta > 0 {
newRect.size.height -= heightDelta
newRect.origin.y += (heightDelta / 2)
}
return newRect
}
It's better to use boundingRectForFont and the function ceilf() when calculating possible maximum font height, because the above-mentioned solution causes text to be cut off under the baseline. So the adjustedFrameToVerticallyCenterText: will look like this
- (NSRect)adjustedFrameToVerticallyCenterText:(NSRect)rect {
CGFloat fontSize = self.font.boundingRectForFont.size.height;
NSInteger offset = floor((NSHeight(rect) - ceilf(fontSize))/2);
NSRect centeredRect = NSInsetRect(rect, 0, offset);
return centeredRect;
}

Alter CGRect (or any struct)?

I do this quite a bit in my code:
self.sliderOne.frame = CGRectMake(newX, 0, self.sliderOne.frame.size.width, self.sliderOne.frame.size.height);
Is there any way to avoid this tedious code? I have tried this type of thing:
self.sliderOne.frame.origin.x = newX;
but I get a Lvalue required as left operand of assignment error.
I finally followed #Dave DeLong's suggestion and made a category. All you have to do is import it in any class that wants to take advantage of it.
UIView+AlterFrame.h
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
#interface UIView (AlterFrame)
- (void) setFrameWidth:(CGFloat)newWidth;
- (void) setFrameHeight:(CGFloat)newHeight;
- (void) setFrameOriginX:(CGFloat)newX;
- (void) setFrameOriginY:(CGFloat)newY;
#end
UIView+AlterFrame.m
#import "UIView+AlterFrame.h"
#implementation UIView (AlterFrame)
- (void) setFrameWidth:(CGFloat)newWidth {
CGRect f = self.frame;
f.size.width = newWidth;
self.frame = f;
}
- (void) setFrameHeight:(CGFloat)newHeight {
CGRect f = self.frame;
f.size.height = newHeight;
self.frame = f;
}
- (void) setFrameOriginX:(CGFloat)newX {
CGRect f = self.frame;
f.origin.x = newX;
self.frame = f;
}
- (void) setFrameOriginY:(CGFloat)newY {
CGRect f = self.frame;
f.origin.y = newY;
self.frame = f;
}
#end
I could DRY up the methods using blocks... I'll do that at some point soon, I hope.
Later: I just noticed CGRectOffset and CGRectInset, so this category could be cleaned up a bit (if not eliminated altogether).
Yeah, you have to do:
CGRect newFrame = self.sliderOne.frame;
newFrame.origin.x = frame.size.width - MARGIN * 2 - totalWidth;
self.sliderOne.frame = newFrame;
It sucks, I know. If you find yourself doing this a lot, you may want to add categories to UIView/NSView to alter this stuff for you:
#interface UIView (FrameMucking)
- (void) setWidth:(CGFloat)newWidth;
#end
#implementation UIView (FrameMucking)
- (void) setWidth:(CGFloat)newWidth {
CGRect f = [self frame];
f.size.width = newWidth;
[self setFrame:f];
}
#end
Etc.
The issue here is that self.sliderOne.frame.origin.x is the same thing as [[self sliderOne] frame].origin.x. As you can see, assigning back to the lValue here is not what you want to do.
So no, that "tedious" code is necessary, although can be shortened up a bit.
CGRect rect = thing.frame;
thing.frame = CGRectMake(CGRectGetMinX(rect), CGRectGetMinY(rect) + 10, etc...);