Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

How to pass the touch event to superview when userInteractionEnabled = YES?

I have the following setup.

+- XXXCustomControl : UIControl -------+
| A                                    |
|   +- ContentView -------------------+|
|   |                                 ||
|   |  B                              ||
|   |                                 ||
|   +---------------------------------+|
+--------------------------------------+ 

A XXXCustomControl that is a subclass of UIControl. It contains one subview called contentView of type UIView with size that is smaller than the Control's area.. That view has .userInteractionEnabled = YES;

I need that property to have set to YES, because horizontal scrollviews are put inside this once in a while and they need to be scrollable. If the superview (in our case content view would not allow user interaction, this is inherited y the subviews.) But at the same time this XXXCustomControl need to be tappable when it contains no scrollview in its content view not only in area A but also in area B.

So I have a "conflict of interests" here because I either

1) set the content view to userInteractionEnabled = NO, then I can tap the empty control in the content view area both in A and B, but the scrollviews I will put there won't be scrollable..

2) set the content view to userInteractionEnabled = YES but then, if the Control s empty, I can only tap area A to trigger a touch event.

One idea I came up with is that I set the property to NO by default and when I populate the contentView I set it to yes. when I clear the contentView I set the property back to no. Basically I want this to have set to yes all the time, and when it is empty ,force the contentView to pass the touchUpInside event up to its superview.

Is this possible?

like image 960
Earl Grey Avatar asked May 06 '14 14:05

Earl Grey


3 Answers

You could try overriding the pointInside:withEvent: method in your inner view. This will allow you to return NO when you want to forward touches to the superview:

-(BOOL)pointInside:(CGPoint)point withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{
    if( /* You have content, and you want to receive touches */){
        return YES;
    }else{
        return NO;
    }
}
like image 113
michaels Avatar answered Oct 18 '22 23:10

michaels


You can subclass your subview, and implement

- (void)touchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
    if (!touchedContent) {
        [[self nextResponder] touchesBegan:touches withEvent:event];
    } else {
        [super touchesBegan:touches withEvent:event];
    }
}
like image 4
Leandros Avatar answered Oct 18 '22 23:10

Leandros


You can use another UIView to "hide" the subview.

*Details : This UIView is the subview's sibling . it has the same size and position of your subview with background color of clear color.

*Explain: The new UIView will take the touch, and automatically pass it to the superview.

This way doesn't need to subclass your subview - it's a storyboard solution.
Please try this. Have fun!

like image 1
letanthang Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 00:10

letanthang