What I do nowadays is use autolayout. The label is pegged by constraints on all sides to the surrounding content view of the cell. I keep an instance of the cell on hand. When it's time to calculate the height of a cell, I fill the label with the text for that row and perform autolayout. The label automatically sizes itself to contain the text; the cell is automatically sized to fit the label; and now I learn the cell size:
- (CGFloat) cellHeightForLabelString:(NSString*)s {
Cell* cell = self.practiceCell;
UILabel* lab = cell.lab;
lab.text = s; // no need to know font, constraints, or anything else about label
CGFloat h = [cell.contentView systemLayoutSizeFittingSize:UILayoutFittingExpandedSize].height;
return ceil(h) + 1;
// The "+1" is needed because the separator subtracts from the cell internal height!
}
Each cell's height is memoized into an array the first time it is requested, so that if it is requested again I can just look it up in the array:
-(CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
NSInteger ix = indexPath.row;
if ([NSNull null] == self.heights[ix]) {
NSString* s = self.trivia[ix];
CGFloat h = [self cellHeightForLabelString:s];
self.heights[ix] = @(h);
}
return [self.heights[ix] floatValue];
}