I've a table view to which I add columns dynamically. It must be done this way because I can't predict how many or which columns I will need.

Some columns are checkboxes but I can't click on them when I run my application. The column and checkbox are set to be editable but if I click on the checkbox the check won't get set. Am I missing something?

Update

How I'm (trying) setting the state on the checkbox:

- (void)tableView:(NSTableView *)theTableView 
   setObjectValue:(id)theObject 
   forTableColumn:(NSTableColumn *)theColumn 
              row:(int)rowIndex
{
    if (theTableView == resultsTableView) {

        if ([[theColumn identifier] isEqualToString:CHCheckBoxColumnIdentifier]) {

            NSInteger state = [[theColumn dataCell] state];
            if (state == NSOnState) {
                [[theColumn dataCell] setState:NSOffState];
            } else {
            [[theColumn dataCell] setState:NSOnState];
            }

            /*
            NSLog(@"%@", theObject);
            NSLog(@"%@", theColumn);
            NSLog(@"%i", rowIndex);
            */
        }
    }
}
link|improve this question

feedback

1 Answer

up vote 2 down vote accepted

Are your columns bound to a controller or are you using the NSTableDataSource protocol? I suspect the latter but you'll need to specify.

Going on my assumption: a click on a checkbox is handled the same way as anything else in the -tableView:setObjectValue:forTableColumn:row: method. Your object will be the state of the button ...

link|improve this answer
Doing that, but when I do a setState on the NSButtonCell it doesn't get set, so I assumed that would be the wrong way to go about doing it. – Cocoaster Jan 27 '10 at 11:40
When you set your state, are you asking the table to -reloadData (or -reloadDataForRowIndexes:columnIndexes: to be more precise)? – Joshua Nozzi Jan 27 '10 at 12:12
Nope. Just set the state and that's it. Should I ask the table to reloadData? Because that would reload everything from the array and I would lose the checkbox I just checked. – Cocoaster Jan 27 '10 at 12:17
Just noticed, that's for 10.6 and my code must run on 10.5. – Cocoaster Jan 27 '10 at 12:24
Just call -reloadData, then - that's the "original" way to refresh a table's contents when it's changed. I'm assuming you're using NSTableDataSource ... you really should read the documentation on this protocol. Essentially, if you change something, you need the table to -reloadData to reflect that change. – Joshua Nozzi Jan 27 '10 at 14:49
show 3 more comments
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.