vote up 2 vote down star

I use UIScrollView to make large-sized (larger than 320px) UI on iPhone.

I made an instance of UIScrollView and added some subviews on it. The problem is I want to enable scrolling only when user touches outside of subviews, stop scrolling when user touches one of subviews.

I read documents and tried to find samples but I can't find good hint. If you have any idea, please help me.

Thank you

flag

40% accept rate

4 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

If you want to detect touches inside any of the subviews of the UIScrollView, you will have to sublcass UIScrollView and override the touchesShouldBegin and touchesShouldCancelInContentView methods which are specifically created for this purpose.

Other than this, there is no way you can identify touches in the subviews as UIScrollView tends to handle all touches itself and doesn't pass them to its subviews.

All the best.

link|flag
Thank you for your answer. I tried to override touchesShouldBegin / touchesShouldCancel... methods but these methods were never called. Maybe something is wrong with my coding but I can stop scrolling by overriding touchesBegin/touchesMoved/touchedEnded methods. Thank you! – fish potato Jan 6 '09 at 14:27
Are you doing this in a subclass on UIScrollView? The methods will be called only then. So instead of your UIViewController using a UIView as its view it should use a subclass of UIScrollView as the view – lostInTransit Jan 7 '09 at 11:36
Yes, i tried this in a subclass of UIScrollView. I got some problem in my implement(only overriding touchesBegan...), so I keep trying to find the reason why touchesShouldBegin method was never called. – fish potato Jan 10 '09 at 2:37
vote up 0 vote down

The simplest way to do this is set delayContentTouches to NO for the scrollview. That way the default behaviour is set so that anything which is a UIControl will pass the touches on to the control immediately andeverything else will scroll.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

You can also sublcass UIScrollViewController and override the touchesBegan, touchesMoved and touchesEnded methods. If your implementation never calls the superclass implementation, then it won't scroll.

link|flag
Thank you for your answer. I tried your suggestion and it worked!! – fish potato Jan 6 '09 at 14:25
vote up 1 vote down

UIScrollView has a scrollEnabled property that allows you to disable scrolling programatically. It also has a delegate (UIScrollViewDelegate) that allows you to see events such as scrolling starting/ending. Seems that you should be able to cook something up with those options combined in some way.

link|flag
Thank you for your reply. I will try your solution now. – fish potato Dec 20 '08 at 14:13

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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