Ok the scenario is that I have a custom class which creates a view containing an image and handles all its own touch events. Occasionally I want to check if moving it would cause it to overlap another view on a parent view. So after the relevent touch event I call a method on the parent view passing it the last touch cordinate and return a BOOL. This works fine while the application remains in portrait orientation.
Problem is after rotating the device and all the images are auto-rotated for me the CGPoint being passed is now in a rotated coordinate system compared with the parent view and the CGRectContainsPoint method being called no longer works properly.
In my willAnimateRotationToInterfaceOrientation method I am adjusting the position of each custom view to improve the layout for the new orientation e.g.
view.frame = CGRectMake((view.frame.origin.x*1.5),(view.frame.origin.y/1.5),view.frame.size.width,view.frame.size.height);
I read that calling the setBound method would then reset the coordinate system:
[view setBounds:view.frame];
but this isn't making a difference in my case. I also tried tinkering with 'convertPoint:toView' but the values it was giving weren't making much sense either. I concluded it wouldn't work in the case where the coordinate system had been rotated?