2

Is there any message I can override called when a Table Cell goes away (on scrolling the table)?

I think it should be something like dealoc.

I'm asking this because I have below situation: I have a table with many cells (100+) and each of this cell contains a ImageView. For loading the image (from a URL) I'm using NSOperationQueue/NSInvocationOperation. The problem appears when user is scrolling the table before the image is completely loaded: because I'm reusing the cells the image is displayed in wrong cell.

To avoid this I'm thinking to use "cancelAllOperations" of NSOperationQueue object when the cell goes away.

Note: I've tried but is not working if I call this message on "prepareForReuse".

5 Answers 5

2

iOS 6:

- (void)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView didEndDisplayingCell:(UITableViewCell *)cell forRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
    // Cancel operation here for cell at indexPath
}
1

Why not keeping the images in your table data source - the array that holds all the data for the table?

This way you won't have to load these images once again when scrolling back and it will solve your problem...

4
  • Hi, Thanks for your tip. I'll take this approach. I'll just have to find a way to avoid overflowing the memory. Any other tips about this will be welcomed, thanks.
    – cfe
    Jul 9, 2010 at 11:49
  • I don't think this will cause you memory problems. What are the sizes of the images? Jul 9, 2010 at 11:56
  • Unfortunately, is it various. But we can assume will not exceed 150Kb each.
    – cfe
    Jul 9, 2010 at 12:06
  • You can also track which ones are visible and if you get a memory warning, release all the ones that are not currently visible.
    – progrmr
    Jul 9, 2010 at 13:32
1

You can subclass UITableViewCell (or any UIView) and override willMoveToWindow:. It is called whenever the cell appears (or scrolls off screen).

When it goes out of the window the parameter will be nil:

- (void)willMoveToWindow:(UIWindow *)newWindow
{
    [super willMoveToWindow:newWindow];

    if (newWindow==nil) {
            // Cell is no longer in window
    }
}
0

If there were, it would be in the UITableViewDelegate class reference: http://developer.apple.com/iphone/library/documentation/UIKit/Reference/UITableViewDelegate_Protocol/Reference/Reference.html#//apple_ref/occ/intf/UITableViewDelegate

The only thing they have is willDisplayCell which lets you do last minute adjustments BEFORE the cell appears. They don't have anything for when it disappears, but you could probably figure that out since there are only a certain number of cells on the screen at a time for a given cell height.

So if one is appearing and for a cell height of 80 for instance (in portrait mode so 480px screen height), then you can say that the one 6 cells away is about to disappear (6 cells * 80 pixels = 480). There are a couple other things to consider like which way you are scrolling, but you get the general idea.

Example Code: You should also look at lazy table loading via Apple's sample code http://developer.apple.com/iphone/library/samplecode/LazyTableImages/Introduction/Intro.html

0

I had the same issue and got some nice feedback in the developer forum. Quinn - The Eskimo from Apple:

As an aside, cancelling a network small transfer because something has scrolled off the screen is probably a performance negative. For small transfers, it's usually more efficient to let it run to completion (and cache the results in case they're needed in the future). This is because of the way that NSURLConnection manages HTTP connection reuse. If you cancel a transfer, NSURLConnection has to either a) drop the underlying HTTP connection on the floor, which means it can't be reused, or b) continue reading and just junk the data. Neither of this is the best use of resources.

Share and Enjoy -- Quinn "The Eskimo!"

So, I'm not cancelling all the ImageDownload Operation, but rather only start them, when the user stops scrolling. Up to then only a placeholder is shown:

- (void)scrollViewWillBeginDragging:(UITableView *) tableView
{
    self.dragging = TRUE;
}

- (void) scrollViewDidEndDragging: (UITableView *) tableView willDecelerate: (BOOL) decelerate
{
    if(!decelerate && self.dragging)
        [self loadThumbsForVisibleCells];    
    else 
        self.dragging = FALSE; 

}

- (void) scrollViewDidEndDecelerating: (UITableView *) tableView
{
    [self loadThumbsForVisibleCells];
}

Hope this helps!

1
  • This is a good concept but doesn't solve the issue for a number of reasons. First, it doesn't solve the issue of having a TableView index, where a user can jump to hundreds of cells in seconds my just running their finger down the index on the right. Second, if you are using a SearchBar to manipulate the TableView directly then again you are going to be reloading massive cells as the user types. I think this is a great concept to minimize performance issues, but it needs to be used on conjunction with canceling operations if a cell isn't visible, regardless of how its on/off the screen. Jan 20, 2013 at 22:35

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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