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I thought I had read that for a UITableView that heightForRowAtIndexPath doesn't get called on all rows, but only on the ones that will be visible. This isn't what I'm seeing however. I'm seeing hundreds of calls to heightForRowAtIndexPath for the simple situation of the orientation being changed of the iPhone for example.

So I'm assuming here therefore that for a UITableView with heightForRowAtIndexPath implemented, it does (i.e. heightForRowAtIndexPath) get called for all rows (not just the visible ones)...let me know if this isn't quite correct.

QUESTION: Given the above, how many rows in a UITableView (where heightForRowAtIndexPath is implemented) can you have before performance issues occur typically?

Is there a way around the performance issues? i.e. set a nominal/standard height for each row and not implement heightForRowAtIndexPath, but then correctly set each row height only when it is displayed and set it correctly here...but which method would one do this in?

4 Answers 4

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Have a look at the discussion section in the tableView:heightForRowAtIndexPath: documentation

The method allows the delegate to specify rows with varying heights. If this method is implemented, the value it returns overrides the value specified for the rowHeight property of UITableView for the given row.

There are performance implications to using tableView:heightForRowAtIndexPath: instead of the rowHeight property. Every time a table view is displayed, it calls tableView:heightForRowAtIndexPath: on the delegate for each of its rows, which can result in a significant performance problem with table views having a large number of rows (approximately 1000 or more).

So you should use the rowHeight property of the UITableView. If you need different heights you are out of luck because you have to use tableView:heightForRowAtIndexPath:.

AFAIK there is no way to change the row height at display.
The tableview has to know the correct size before, otherewise there would be ugly position shifts all the time.

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  • oh, but then again I have a tableview here with around 500 items in it and the performance seems poor - so that would seem to imply you really can't have a tableView with so many rows in it realistically no?
    – Greg
    Mar 16, 2011 at 11:16
  • it implies that you can't have 500 rows with different heights. If all rows have the same height (set in the rowHeight property) there shouldn't be a performance impact that huge. Mar 16, 2011 at 11:22
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    i really wish apple would fix this defect of not being able to have dynamic row heights with a large number of rows. i would be interested to know if there is some other way to dynamically manage the number of rows in a UITableView as keep the numbers minimal.
    – geekinit
    Dec 23, 2011 at 18:19
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    I'm not entirely sure they can fix it, actually. For a completely different reason, I started developing my own custom tableView with the intent of recreating Apple's functionality and adding my own. I quickly realized that I had to know the heights of all cells in order to make it work. Because you can't predict where the table will be (it can programmatically jump) you've gotta be prepared to layout views at any location, which means you have to know all the heights. The only alternative is to calculate the all previous heights on each layout, which would be prohibitively expensive. Apr 16, 2012 at 20:44
  • this kills me but at least I have an answer. You think they could at least make it so they figure out say the first 50 rows and then calculate the rest in batches on the fly as the user scrolls like they do with the fethBatchSize in CoreData. My app will sometimes have 1000+ rows and some MIGHT have a different row size - gets crushingly slow to load
    – Slee
    Dec 7, 2012 at 15:42
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I think I found a solution to that.

In iOS 7 apple introduced some new tableview properties. One of them is the:

tableView:estimatedHeightForRowAtIndexPath:

So if you supply an estimated row height, for example, then when tableView:heightForRowAtIndexPath: is called repeatedly before the table is displayed, it is called only for the visible cells of the table; for the remaining cells, the estimated height is used.

Here is the source for that information: https://books.google.gr/books?id=wLaVBQAAQBAJ&pg=PT521&lpg=PT521&dq=heightforrowatindexpath+only+for+the+visible+cells&source=bl&ots=7tuwaMT5zV&sig=h3q8AaFvoCgcrPu2fQchVkIEjwg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CEMQ6AEwBWoVChMInLK0xbPuxwIVCbUaCh3_nQWG#v=onepage&q=heightforrowatindexpath%20only%20for%20the%20visible%20cells&f=false

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My goodness, I spent over an hour trying to find the source of my performance problem!

Finally I also found hundreds of calls to heightForRowAtIndexPath and a search got me this thread. THAT is really annoying. Performance goes down here already when just displaying 250 items. Thankfully the cells I want to display now all have the same size. But I could imagine someone wanting to display some different cells for a tableView with > 200 items!

FIX THIS APPLE!

Cheers

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A way to improve performance in tableViews with a big number of rows and dynamic cell heights is to cache the height of the cells once they are first calculated.

A simplistic approach to achieve this is to keep a NSMutableDictionary in which the key is the id of the record in the cell (or any other identifier you might have), and the value is a NSNumber with the height of the row. Once the height is first calculated, store it the NSMutableDictionary by the record id. In the tableView:heightForRowAtIndexPath and tableView:estimatedHeightForRowAtIndexPath: you check for a cached height in the dictionary and return it if found. If not found, calculate the height, and store in the cache before returning the height.

You might have to be careful with invalidating the cache for the rows that change heights. For example, if you have an expand button in one of your cells, you will need to remove the height of that cell from cache once the expand button is tapped delegate method for height is called.

You might still have a performance hit if you try to display 1000 of cells at once when the table shows, as it will likely call the height method for each row. A work around for that is to first warm the cache, if possible in a background task, before first displaying the cells.

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