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I have an issue where when a textField is clicked on in a UITableView cell, the method tableView:didSelectRowAtIndexPath: does not get invoked. The problem is, I need to scroll my tableView into proper position, otherwise the keyboard goes right over the first responder.

I have to then move code like this:

[[self tableView] scrollToRowAtIndexPath:indexPath atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];

into both my tableView delegate method and in my UITextField delegate method, textFieldDidBeginEditing:

Is the best way to just create a new method, pass to it the indexPath of the cell/textfield being clicked, and call the method from both the tableView delegate and the UITextField delegate? better way of going about it?

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5 Answers

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You can set your controller as the delegate of your UITextField, then adjust your table view in either textFieldDidBeginEditing: or textFieldShouldBeginEditing:

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August, that's what I'm currently doing. The problem with that is, the scrolling needs to happen in two places. On the tableView:didSelectRowAtIndexPath: method and in the textFieldDidBeginEditing: method. Clicking directly on the UITextField doesn't bubble up so it can't be handled in one place. – Coocoo4Cocoa Dec 8 '08 at 21:20
You should have the UITextFieldDelegate methods call the tableView:didSelectRowAtIndexPath: if the scrollng in both cases is the same. This is the only reasonable way to do it, since the UITableView is obscured by the UITextField. – Matt Gallagher Dec 8 '08 at 22:11
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Register for UIKeyboardWillShowNotification and UIKeyboardWillHideNotification, then adjust your view as necessary in the notification handlers. One of the example apps shows how to do this, but I forget which...SQLiteBooks, or maybe EditableDetailView.

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Did somebody found a solution to this? Thank you!

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There are a couple of ways to fix this issue. What happens is that the tableViewCell delegates the touch event to its subviews which causes the textfield to handle the touch in stead of your cell.

To fix this:

  • Set the UITextfield's userinteractionEnabled property to NO, then when you get the didSelectRowAtIndexPath message you re-enable userInteractionEnabled and call the TextField's becomeFirstResponder. On v2.2 you don't even need to set the userInteractionEnabled flag, I have not tested this with other versions however the documentation is quite clear that you should have this enabled. in the tableViewController you simply need to have the indexpath saved until you get the UIKeyboardDidShow message

  • Create a delegate for the UITextField that reports back to your tableViewController so that you can set the scrolling offset from there.

  • register for the keyboard events and then figure out the scrolloffset by checking what textfield is in editing mode

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I was struggling with this same issue, where I have UITextFields inside of UITableViewCells and couldn't get view to scroll to the field when it was being edited. The core of my solution is below.

The key to this code is the line where the UITextField is created. Instead of hard coding a x and y value in the CGRectMake() function, it uses the x and y from the cell in which its being placed (+/- any offset you want from the edges of the cell as shown below). Hard coding x and y values in the UITextField* gives every cell the same x,y frame position for every UITextField* (it apparently is overridden by the cells frame when its displayed) so when you invoke the 'scrollRectToVisible' code it doesn't seem to have the correct coordinates to which it should scroll.

1) create cell, and add UITextField* to the cell using cell's frame x and y values (I'm including offsets here which are optional

- (UITableViewCell *)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView cellForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {

	UITableViewCell* cell;
	cell = [tableView dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier:@"UITableViewCell"];
	cell = [[[UITableViewCell alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectZero reuseIdentifier:@"UITableViewCell"] autorelease]; 

	//this is the critical part: make sure your UITextField* frame is based on the frame of the cell in which it's being placed.
	UITextField* txtField = [[UITextField alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(cell.frame.origin.x+20, cell.frame.origin.y+9, 280, 31)];
	txtField.delegate = self;

	[cell addSubview:txtField];
	return cell;
}

2) adjust scroll view in textFieldDidBeginEditing

-(void) textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField {

	CGRect textFieldRect = [textField frame];
	[self.tableView scrollRectToVisible:textFieldRect animated:YES];
}
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