8

I understand that there is a tableHeaderView property, but when ever I add my view to that, it is not hidden above the scroll area.

What I would like to have is, my custom view shown when you pull down the tableview and hold and you see my UIView brought into view. This is done on many apps to put a logo or such slightly hidden until a user pulls down on the tableview (Twitter/Facebook when you pulldown).

I am currently using the following and it is not putting it out of the view:

    UILabel *l = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, 300, 20)];
    l.text = @"Hidden Text";
    l.textColor = [UIColor redColor];
    self.tableView.tableHeaderView = l;
    [l release];

4 Answers 4

13

Since UITableView is actually a UIScrollView with some extra functionality, you can use contentInset to obtain the effect you want. The trick is to use a negative value for the top inset. This will normally hide your header view, but it will still be viewable when the table bounces.

So, after you add the label to the header view, just set the contentInset like this:


    UILabel *l = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, 300, 20)];
    l.text = @"Hidden Text";
    l.textColor = [UIColor redColor];
    self.tableView.tableHeaderView = l;

    //add this
    [self.tableView setContentInset:UIEdgeInsetsMake(-l.bounds.size.height, 0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f)];

    [l release];
0
1

The best solution here is to add your view to the header, as you had mentioned you tried, and then in your controller's viewDidLoad actually scroll the tableview downward programmatically until the header view you wanted hidden is hidden. This can be done a number of different ways. The easiest is probably:

[self.tableView setContentOffset: CGPointMake(0, myHeaderHeight)];
2
  • The problem with this solution is that once it is shown it won't spring back up to hide it again. I want it to only be relieved when the tableview is pulled down, when they let their finger go, it will bounce back to hide the UIView. Feb 28, 2011 at 23:53
  • Note that setting contentOffset in viewDidLoad has no effect. You can set the offset for example in viewWillAppear:.
    – Palimondo
    Sep 9, 2011 at 6:57
0

Simply have a 0-height header view, and then have a subview of that be positioned with a negative y, and so that the bottom edge of the subview is the top of the view.

0
UIWindow* window = [[UIApplication sharedApplication].delegate.window;
[window addSubview: your-overlayview];

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