If you want to stop a view's subviews from being drawn outside its borders, you need to set its clipsToBounds
property to YES
. (See the UIView class reference for details.)
If you want to stop your views from being in certain positions, don't move them there! It's your code that's putting them where you don't want them to be. If you're using a gesture recogniser, presumably you have a method that responds to gestures by adjusting the frame of a view - put some conditions on this movement that prevent it from happening when you don't want it.
When you write these conditions, bear in mind that a view's origin is relative to its superview. For example, say you have a view controller with a view that takes up the whole screen of the device, and inside that a box that starts at 0, 100
, and inside that some squares and circles and squiggly shapes that the user can move around. If you examine containerBox.bounds.origin
, you'll find that it's 0, 100
, but if you want to put a square in the top left corner of the box, you need to get its frame and set the origin to 0, 0
. Something to look out for.
I didn't follow your explanation of the 'origin technique'. If you paste your code, I might be able to help.