I have a UIImage view that responds to touch events. I want to cancel the touch sequence, i.e., further calls to touchesMoved:, if the touch goes outside of certain bounds. How can I do that?

I know that in touchesMoved: I can inspect the coordinates of the touch object and ignore it, but what I don't know is how to cancel the sequence altogether. I don't see any method documented in the Apple Developer UIResponder Reference that I can call to cancel a touch sequence.

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wow, question is almost 3 years old. – beryllium Nov 21 '11 at 11:01
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7 Answers

This solution may be a bit kludgy, but you could implement and manually call

- (void) touchesCancelled:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event;

I am basing this solution loosely on some tweaking I did to the MoveMe sample app on Apple's iPhone sample code site where I modified the touchesMoved method to look like this:

- (void) touchesMoved:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
     UITouch *touch = [touches anyObject];
     if ([touch view] == placardView)
         CGPoint location = [touch locationInView:self];
         placardView.center = location;
         // I added the following line:
         [self touchesCancelled:touches withEvent:event];
         return;
}
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Thanks, I'll give this a try when I get back to my mac. But is this going to cancel the subsequent touches events? It seems to me that after a manual call to touchesCancelled, the touchesMoved would still be called by the system. – subjective-c Feb 12 '09 at 4:44
Within the confines of the MoveMe sample code it will cancel the touch, but I believe you're right, touchesMoved would still be called. The more I think about it the less I think touchesCancelled is the right call. – Michael Fey Feb 12 '09 at 21:55
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You need to call [super touchesMoved:withEvent:] in order to let the super view clean up from the event but more importantly, you need to not call [super touchesCancelled:withEvent:].

Here's what I used on a cell to keep it from getting selected when I detected a swipe:

- (void)touchesMoved:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{
    if (!showingEdit) {
        if (IS_FAR_ENOUGH_TO_BE_A_SWIPE) {
            RESPOND_TO_SWIPE
            showingEdit = YES;
            [super touchesCancelled:touches withEvent:event];
        } else {
            [super touchesMoved:touches withEvent:event];
        }
    }
}

- (void)touchesEnded:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{
    if (!showingEdit) {
        [super touchesEnded:touches withEvent:event];
    }
}
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This didn't work for me. – MattDiPasquale Nov 17 '11 at 19:17
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You can check that, the touch point locations are in CGRect (ie. points are in Rectangle of your imageview) or not. If they are not in that Rect, the touch will be cancelled.

-(void)touchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event 
 {
UITouch *touch = [touches anyObject];
CGPoint touchLocation = [touch locationInView:self.view];

    if (CGRectContainsPoint(myImageView, touchLocation))
    {
       lastPoint = [touch locationInView: myImageView];
    }

    NSLog(@"Last :%.2f - %.2f",lastPoint.x, lastPoint.y);   
  }

 - (void)touchesMoved:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event 
 {
  CGPoint currentPoint;
  UITouch *touch = [touches anyObject];
  CGPoint touchLocation = [touch locationInView:self.view];

     if (CGRectContainsPoint(myImageView.frame, touchLocation))
     {
       currentPoint = [touch locationInView: myImageView];
     }
 }
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That code doesn't cancel further calls to touchesMoved:. It just ignores them. – MattDiPasquale Nov 25 '11 at 16:27
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On iOS5 there seems to be a private method in UITouch

-(void)setSentTouchesEnded:(BOOL)ended;

Depending on apple's implementation it could stop sending events

Another way of doing so would be using associative objects

- (void)touchesMoved:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{
    if ([(NSNumber *)objc_getAssociatedObject(touch, &outKey) boolValue])
        return;
    if (sometouchisoutsideofview) {
        objc_setAssociatedObject(touch, &outKey, [NSNumber numberWithBool:YES], OBJC_ASSOCIATION_RETAIN);
    }
}
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I've faced the same problem recently and found a standard way to solve it. You can use [[UIApplication sharedApplication] beginIgnoringInteractionEvents] to stop delivering touchesMoved events to your whole app. Make sure to enable them using [[UIApplication sharedApplication] endIgnoringInteractionEvents] when you need to receive touches again.

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I don't think it's possible because I don't see it documented and none of these solutions work.

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Try temporary setting the UIImageView's userInteractionEnabled property to NO

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