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I have a UITableView populated with many custom UITableViewCells. Each of them has a colored rectangle as a subview (currently it is a stylized UIButton but I can implement it anyway necessary).

I want the UITableViewCell to call tableview:didSelectRowAtIndexPath: only when that part is selected.

Other similar questions asked how to get subviews to ignore events. But this would not work for me because selecting anywhere outside that rectangle would also trigger it.

I am not sure whether to limit the area of the cell that triggers the method or to disable triggering from the cell and instead allow the subview to trigger the method. Either way, I do not know the details of the implementation.

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  • Why don't you use the button action method?
    – Wain
    Oct 12, 2013 at 15:32

4 Answers 4

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In didSelect get your cell (passed to you), and check to see if the button in that cell is selected. If it is then do what you need, otherwise ignore it.

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  • Oh that is a clever way, thank you! But, how would I check if the button was pressed? Also, is there a way of making it highlight only the button and not the whole cell? For example, look at the Settings app (or any app with a master-detail template). When you press a cell, it highlights, then segues to another view controller. and when you hit back, it segues back and also keeps the highlighted cell until the segue animation is complete and then it de-highlights it. Is it possible to get that behavior with only the rectangle and not the whole row? Thanks for the prompt answer!
    – golddove
    Oct 12, 2013 at 18:31
  • When the button is pressed do [button setSelected: YES]; to see if it is selected do button.isSelected; (do the opposite to deselect). But make sure you link the selected with your datasource, otherwise dequeing cells may move buttons around. To "highlight" button, you can change the color, or image for the button (for default state, or selected state). This can also be done in interface builder Oct 12, 2013 at 18:40
  • What would happen if the user presses the button, moves thumb to right (off of button) and lets go? Is there a way to take action only if the button was pressed and let go?
    – golddove
    Oct 12, 2013 at 18:55
  • Sorry for so many comments. How would I do [button setSelected: YES]? I would have to put a target method for the button, right? And if I do this, didSelectRowAtIndexPath will not get called. The only way it would be called is if we disable the ability to select the button (making it "event transparent" as I heard some people call it)
    – golddove
    Oct 12, 2013 at 18:58
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I don't know why you want to call didSelectRowAtIndexPath: but if you want to receive touch events from the button you can connect the button pressed event(touch up inside) to the table view controller if you have subclassed it or connect it to the table view controller's delegate if you have delegated it. If you need to actually select the row then you can call selectRowAtIndexPath:animated:scrollPosition: and select the row programmatically when the button is pushed.

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  • If I do that second implementation, it would not prevent the user from selecting the row outside of the button. The problem with the first one is that I may lose any extra behavior that one gets from the delegate method didSelectRowFromIndexPath. I am not very fluent with ios, so I am not sure. What are all the things that the didSelectRowAtIndexPath method does that I would not get if I just made it call my own target method? For example, look at my comment for @WilliamFalcon , will I still get that behavior with my own method?
    – golddove
    Oct 12, 2013 at 18:35
  • The whole idea of delegate methods is that they are a place for you to add custom behavior. If you don't delegate it, it will behave normally. You can call the selectRowAtIndexPath:animated:scrollPosition: manually if you are concerned that there is some other side affect. Oct 13, 2013 at 2:48
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Have you considered not calling didSelectRowAtIndexPath and instead creating an action for the UIButton to trigger when it is touched? I am not sure exactly what you want to do when when the UIButton is touched but lets say you just wanted to push a new view controller within the method.

If you are using a nib or storyboard and your UITableView instance belongs to a UITableViewController you could connect your UIButton to an action that looks like this,

-(IBAction)buttonTapped:(id)sender {

     NewViewController *newViewController = [[NewViewController alloc] init];
     [newViewController setSomeProperty:property];
     [[self navigationController] pushViewController:newViewController animated:YES];
}

If you are not using a nib or storyboard then you could just connect an action to the UIButton programmatically in your init method or elsewhere.

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  • It is not the root view of a UITableViewController, but it does have a delegate and datasource. As to doing this, look at my comment for @SaintMacintosh .
    – golddove
    Oct 12, 2013 at 18:45
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Make a custom subclass of a UITableViewCell and in that - add your own button. In whatever area you want.

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  • Like I said, it is a custom cell. And like I said, there is a UIButton in it. And yes, it is a subclass. How would I go about doing what I asked in my question?
    – golddove
    Oct 12, 2013 at 18:42

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