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after a lot of trial and error, I'm giving up and asking the question. I've seen a lot of people with similar problems but can't get all the answers to work right.

I have a UITableView which is composed of custom cells. The cells are made of 5 text fields next to each other (sort of like a grid).

When I try to scroll and edit the cells at the bottom of the UITableView, I can't manage to get my cells properly positioned above the keyboard.

I have seen many answers talking about changing view sizes,etc... but none of them has worked nicely so far.

Could anybody clarify the "right" way to do this with a concrete code example?

Thanks in advance, Jonathan

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25 Answers

I think I've come up with the solution to match the behaviour of Apple's apps.

First, in your viewWillAppear: subscribe to the keyboard notifications, so you know when the keyboard will show and hide, and the system will tell you the size of the keyboard, but dont' forget to unregister in your viewWillDisappear:.

[[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter]
    addObserver:self
       selector:@selector(keyboardWillShow:)
           name:UIKeyboardWillShowNotification
         object:nil];
[[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter]
    addObserver:self
       selector:@selector(keyboardWillHide:)
           name:UIKeyboardWillHideNotification
         object:nil];

Implement the methods similar to the below so that you adjust the size of your tableView to match the visible area once the keyboard shows. Here I'm tracking the state of the keyboard separately so I can choose when to set the tableView back to full height myself, since you get these notifications on every field change. Don't forget to implement keyboardWillHide: and choose somewhere appropriate to fix your tableView size.

-(void) keyboardWillShow:(NSNotification *)note
{
    CGRect keyboardBounds;
    [[note.userInfo valueForKey:UIKeyboardBoundsUserInfoKey] getValue: &keyboardBounds];
    keyboardHeight = keyboardBounds.size.height;
    if (keyboardIsShowing == NO)
    {
        keyboardIsShowing = YES;
        CGRect frame = self.view.frame;
        frame.size.height -= keyboardHeight;

        [UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
        [UIView setAnimationBeginsFromCurrentState:YES];
        [UIView setAnimationDuration:0.3f];
        self.view.frame = frame;
        [UIView commitAnimations];
    }
}

Now here's the scrolling bit, we work out a few sizes first, then we see where we are in the visible area, and set the rect we want to scroll to to be either the half view above or below the middle of the text field based on where it is in the view. In this case, we have an array of UITextFields and an enum that keeps track of them, so multiplying the rowHeight by the row number gives us the actual offset of the frame within this outer view.

- (void) textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
    CGRect frame = textField.frame;
    CGFloat rowHeight = self.tableView.rowHeight;
    if (textField == textFields[CELL_FIELD_ONE])
    {
        frame.origin.y += rowHeight * CELL_FIELD_ONE;
    }
    else if (textField == textFields[CELL_FIELD_TWO])
    {
        frame.origin.y += rowHeight * CELL_FIELD_TWO;
    }
    else if (textField == textFields[CELL_FIELD_THREE])
    {
        frame.origin.y += rowHeight * CELL_FIELD_THREE;
    }
    else if (textField == textFields[CELL_FIELD_FOUR])
    {
        frame.origin.y += rowHeight * CELL_FIELD_FOUR;
    }
    CGFloat viewHeight = self.tableView.frame.size.height;
    CGFloat halfHeight = viewHeight / 2;
    CGFloat midpoint = frame.origin.y + (textField.frame.size.height / 2);
    if (midpoint < halfHeight)
    {
        frame.origin.y = 0;
        frame.size.height = midpoint;
    }
    else
    {
        frame.origin.y = midpoint;
        frame.size.height = midpoint;
    }
    [self.tableView scrollRectToVisible:frame animated:YES];
}

This seems to work quite nicely.

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Nice solution. Thanks for posting it. – Alex Reynolds Oct 8 '09 at 10:56
1  
Its' not working on 4.0 any help ... – iPhoneDev Oct 26 '10 at 16:13
1  
UIKeyboardBoundsUserInfoKey is deprecated as of iOS 3.2. See my solution below that works across all current iOS releases ≥ 3.0. /@iPhoneDev – Ortwin Gentz Dec 13 '10 at 16:04
This was more complicated than it needed to be. @user91083's answer was simple and works. – Richard Brightwell May 31 '11 at 2:47
There's a small problem in this solution. keyboardWillShow is called AFTER textFieldDidBeginEditing, so when we want to scroll to some cell, tableView's frame hasn't changed yet, so it won't work – HiveHicks Jan 25 at 9:58
feedback

The function that does the scrolling could be much simpler:

- (void) textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField {
    UITableViewCell *cell = (UITableViewCell*) [[textField superview] superview];
    [tView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:[tView indexPathForCell:cell] atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
}

That's it. No calculations at all.

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I don't think that's going to match the Apple behaviour where the text field responder is centred within the visible area of the table view. – Michael Baltaks Apr 27 '09 at 3:01
2  
And why not?! Just replace UITableViewScrollPositionTop with UITableViewScrollPositionMiddle. You just need to rescale the UITableView to adjust the visible area, of course. – Mihai Damian Apr 12 '10 at 15:01
Great suggestion. – Luther Baker Aug 19 '10 at 5:33
Very useful ! You can even make it more independant by getting the table view that way: UITableView tView = (UITableView) [cell superview]; – John Riche Sep 17 '10 at 15:13
You don't update the tableView frame. Then, the scrollBars and the scrolling behavior are wrong when the keyboard is shown. See my solution. – Ortwin Gentz Dec 13 '10 at 16:19
feedback

If you use UITableViewController instead of UIViewController, it will automatically do so.

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6  
Did you try and found that not working? Or is the solution too simple for you to believe? Just extend the UITableViewController instead of UIViewController and the cell containing the textfields will scroll above the keyboard whenever the textfields become the first responder. No extra code needed. – Sam Ho Sep 23 '10 at 5:03
2  
Sam, you're a genius. – spstanley May 18 '11 at 1:04
This solved it for me too. You should refactor your IB layout so that your table is the TVC's view. If you need it in a container view, you should rethink your approach or you'll end up using a hack-around. – RickDT Jun 10 '11 at 1:31
Yes, but especially on the iPad we need a way to do this that doesn't involve the UITableViewController. – Bob Spryn Jul 17 '11 at 1:19
1  
To clarify, its not a reasonable answer to say that every single time you use a tableview it needs to be full screen, especially on an iPad. There are hordes of examples of great apps that don't do that. For instance, many of Apple's own, including the Contacts app on the iPad. – Bob Spryn Jul 17 '11 at 1:44
feedback

Some of the solutions presented here don't work on iOS ≥4, some don't work on iPad or in landscape mode, some don't work for Bluetooth keyboards (where we don't want any scrolling), some don't work when switching between multiple text fields. So if you choose any solution, make sure to test these cases. This is the solution we use in InAppSettingsKit:

- (void)_keyboardWillShow:(NSNotification*)notification {
    if (self.navigationController.topViewController == self) {
        NSDictionary* userInfo = [notification userInfo];

        // we don't use SDK constants here to be universally compatible with all SDKs ≥ 3.0
        NSValue* keyboardFrameValue = [userInfo objectForKey:@"UIKeyboardBoundsUserInfoKey"];
        if (!keyboardFrameValue) {
            keyboardFrameValue = [userInfo objectForKey:@"UIKeyboardFrameEndUserInfoKey"];
        }

        // Reduce the tableView height by the part of the keyboard that actually covers the tableView
        CGRect windowRect = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] keyWindow].bounds;
        if (UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeLeft == self.interfaceOrientation ||UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeRight == self.interfaceOrientation ) {
            windowRect = IASKCGRectSwap(windowRect);
        }
        CGRect viewRectAbsolute = [_tableView convertRect:_tableView.bounds toView:[[UIApplication sharedApplication] keyWindow]];
        if (UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeLeft == self.interfaceOrientation ||UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeRight == self.interfaceOrientation ) {
            viewRectAbsolute = IASKCGRectSwap(viewRectAbsolute);
        }
        CGRect frame = _tableView.frame;
        frame.size.height -= [keyboardFrameValue CGRectValue].size.height - CGRectGetMaxY(windowRect) + CGRectGetMaxY(viewRectAbsolute);

        [UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
        [UIView setAnimationDuration:[[userInfo objectForKey:UIKeyboardAnimationDurationUserInfoKey] doubleValue]];
        [UIView setAnimationCurve:[[userInfo objectForKey:UIKeyboardAnimationCurveUserInfoKey] intValue]];
        _tableView.frame = frame;
        [UIView commitAnimations];

        UITableViewCell *textFieldCell = (id)((UITextField *)self.currentFirstResponder).superview.superview;
        NSIndexPath *textFieldIndexPath = [_tableView indexPathForCell:textFieldCell];

        // iOS 3 sends hide and show notifications right after each other
        // when switching between textFields, so cancel -scrollToOldPosition requests
        [NSObject cancelPreviousPerformRequestsWithTarget:self];

        [_tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:textFieldIndexPath atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionMiddle animated:YES];
    }
}

- (void) scrollToOldPosition {
  [_tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:_topmostRowBeforeKeyboardWasShown atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
}

- (void)_keyboardWillHide:(NSNotification*)notification {
    if (self.navigationController.topViewController == self) {
        NSDictionary* userInfo = [notification userInfo];

        [UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
        [UIView setAnimationDuration:[[userInfo objectForKey:UIKeyboardAnimationDurationUserInfoKey] doubleValue]];
        [UIView setAnimationCurve:[[userInfo objectForKey:UIKeyboardAnimationCurveUserInfoKey] intValue]];
        _tableView.frame = self.view.bounds;
        [UIView commitAnimations];

        [self performSelector:@selector(scrollToOldPosition) withObject:nil afterDelay:0.1];
    }
}   

Here's the full code of the class in InAppSettingsKit. To test it, use the "Complete List" child pane where you can test the scenarios mentioned above.

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I don't know if it's useful to use strings instead of constants, because if Apple comes to the idea to change the String internally for some reasons, your solution is not working anymore. Likewise you did not get an warning when it becomes deprecated.I think – relikd Dec 18 '10 at 14:12
@iPortable: it's not ideal, I know. Can you suggest a better solution that runs on all versions ≥3.0? – Ortwin Gentz Dec 20 '10 at 10:06
+1 for working like charms – diwup May 10 '11 at 15:20
1  
Works like charm, but not for UIInterfaceOrientationPortraitUpsideDown. Then the calculation of the height reduction has to be based upside down as well: CGFloat reduceHeight = keyboardRect.size.height - ( CGRectGetMinY(viewRectAbsolute) - CGRectGetMinY(windowRect)); – Klaas Hermanns Jun 6 '11 at 14:13
This has very noticeable visual glitches on my iPad and the Simulator (4.3). Too noticeable to use. :( – Bob Spryn Jul 17 '11 at 1:39
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feedback

I'm doing something very similar it's generic, no need to compute something specific for your code. Just check the remarks on the code:

In MyUIViewController.h

@interface MyUIViewController: UIViewController <UITableViewDelegate, UITableViewDataSource>
{
     UITableView *myTableView;
     UITextField *actifText;
}

@property (nonatomic, retain) IBOutlet UITableView *myTableView;
@property (nonatomic, retain) IBOutlet UITextField *actifText;

- (IBAction)textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField;
- (IBAction)textFieldDidEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField;

-(void) keyboardWillHide:(NSNotification *)note;
-(void) keyboardWillShow:(NSNotification *)note;

@end

In MyUIViewController.m

@implementation MyUIViewController

@synthesize myTableView;
@synthesize actifText;

- (void)viewDidLoad 
{
    // Register notification when the keyboard will be show
    [[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter] addObserver:self
                                          selector:@selector(keyboardWillShow:)
                                          name:UIKeyboardWillShowNotification
                                          object:nil];

    // Register notification when the keyboard will be hide
    [[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter] addObserver:self
                                          selector:@selector(keyboardWillHide:)
                                          name:UIKeyboardWillHideNotification
                                          object:nil];
}

// To be link with your TextField event "Editing Did Begin"
//  memoryze the current TextField
- (IBAction)textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
    self.actifText = textField;
}

// To be link with your TextField event "Editing Did End"
//  release current TextField
- (IBAction)textFieldDidEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
    self.actifText = nil;
}

-(void) keyboardWillShow:(NSNotification *)note
{
    // Get the keyboard size
    CGRect keyboardBounds;
    [[note.userInfo valueForKey:UIKeyboardFrameBeginUserInfoKey] getValue: &keyboardBounds];

    // Detect orientation
    UIInterfaceOrientation orientation = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] statusBarOrientation];
    CGRect frame = self.myTableView.frame;

    // Start animation
    [UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
    [UIView setAnimationBeginsFromCurrentState:YES];
    [UIView setAnimationDuration:0.3f];

    // Reduce size of the Table view 
    if (orientation == UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait || orientation == UIInterfaceOrientationPortraitUpsideDown)
        frame.size.height -= keyboardBounds.size.height;
    else 
        frame.size.height -= keyboardBounds.size.width;

    // Apply new size of table view
    self.myTableView.frame = frame;

    // Scroll the table view to see the TextField just above the keyboard
    if (self.actifText)
      {
        CGRect textFieldRect = [self.myTableView convertRect:self.actifText.bounds fromView:self.actifText];
        [self.myTableView scrollRectToVisible:textFieldRect animated:NO];
      }

    [UIView commitAnimations];
}

-(void) keyboardWillHide:(NSNotification *)note
{
    // Get the keyboard size
    CGRect keyboardBounds;
    [[note.userInfo valueForKey:UIKeyboardFrameBeginUserInfoKey] getValue: &keyboardBounds];

    // Detect orientation
    UIInterfaceOrientation orientation = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] statusBarOrientation];
    CGRect frame = self.myTableView.frame;

    [UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
    [UIView setAnimationBeginsFromCurrentState:YES];
    [UIView setAnimationDuration:0.3f];

    // Reduce size of the Table view 
    if (orientation == UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait || orientation == UIInterfaceOrientationPortraitUpsideDown)
        frame.size.height += keyboardBounds.size.height;
    else 
        frame.size.height += keyboardBounds.size.width;

    // Apply new size of table view
    self.myTableView.frame = frame;

    [UIView commitAnimations];
}

@end
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using the notifications and getting the keyboard height while incorporating device orientation was awesome, thanks for that! the scrolling part did not work for me for some reason, so i had to use this: [tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath: indexPath atScrollPosition: UITableViewScrollPositionMiddle animated: YES]; – taber Aug 7 '10 at 7:10
2  
This is the best answer here I think. Very clean. Only two things:1) your viewDidLoad is not calling [super viewDidLoad] and 2) I had to had in some tabbar math on the frame.size.height lines. Otherwise perfect! Thanks. – toxaq Sep 23 '10 at 13:24
1  
Actually, another point, your whole viewDidLoad should actually be in your initWithNib methoed. Otherwise if you reuse the view the notifications will get registered more than once. Additionally, I needed to removed the tabbar height in the same way I added it if that wasn't obvious from my earlier comment. – toxaq Sep 23 '10 at 13:48
1  
Here's the modification toxaq describes: MyAppDelegate *appDelegate = (MyAppDelegate*)[[UIApplication sharedApplication] delegate]; CGFloat tabBarHeight = appDelegate.tabBarController.tabBar.frame.size.height; Then subtract tabBarHeight from keyboard height wherever you use keyboard height. – Steve N Dec 7 '10 at 17:06
This solution only works on iOS ≥ 3.2. UIKeyboardFrameBeginUserInfoKey is not available on older iOS versions. See my solution below that works across all current iOS releases ≥ 3.0. – Ortwin Gentz Dec 13 '10 at 16:06
show 1 more comment
feedback

Combining and filling in the blanks from several answers (in particular Ortwin Gentz, user 98013) and another post, this will work out of the box for SDK 4.3 on an iPad in Portrait or Landscape mode:

@implementation UIView (FindFirstResponder)
- (UIResponder *)findFirstResponder
{
  if (self.isFirstResponder) {        
    return self;     
  }

  for (UIView *subView in self.subviews) {
    UIResponder *firstResponder = [subView findFirstResponder];
    if (firstResponder != nil) {
      return firstResponder;
    }
  }

  return nil;
}
@end

@implementation MyViewController

- (UIResponder *)currentFirstResponder {
  return [self.view findFirstResponder];
}

- (IBAction)editingEnded:sender {
  [sender resignFirstResponder];
}

- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField {
  [textField resignFirstResponder];
  return NO;
}

- (void)textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField {
  UITableViewCell *cell = (UITableViewCell*) [[textField superview] superview];
  [_tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:[_tableView indexPathForCell:cell] atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
}

- (void)keyboardWillShow:(NSNotification*)notification {
  if ([self currentFirstResponder] != nil) {
    NSDictionary* userInfo = [notification userInfo];

    // we don't use SDK constants here to be universally compatible with all SDKs ≥ 3.0
    NSValue* keyboardFrameValue = [userInfo objectForKey:@"UIKeyboardBoundsUserInfoKey"];
    if (!keyboardFrameValue) {
      keyboardFrameValue = [userInfo objectForKey:@"UIKeyboardFrameEndUserInfoKey"];
    }

    // Reduce the tableView height by the part of the keyboard that actually covers the tableView
    CGRect windowRect = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] keyWindow].bounds;
    CGRect viewRectAbsolute = [_tableView convertRect:_tableView.bounds toView:[[UIApplication sharedApplication] keyWindow]];
    CGRect frame = _tableView.frame;
    if (UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeLeft == self.interfaceOrientation ||UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeRight == self.interfaceOrientation ) {
      windowRect = CGRectMake(windowRect.origin.y, windowRect.origin.x, windowRect.size.height, windowRect.size.width);
      viewRectAbsolute = CGRectMake(viewRectAbsolute.origin.y, viewRectAbsolute.origin.x, viewRectAbsolute.size.height, viewRectAbsolute.size.width);
    }
    frame.size.height -= [keyboardFrameValue CGRectValue].size.height - CGRectGetMaxY(windowRect) + CGRectGetMaxY(viewRectAbsolute);

    [UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
    [UIView setAnimationDuration:[[userInfo objectForKey:UIKeyboardAnimationDurationUserInfoKey] doubleValue]];
    [UIView setAnimationCurve:[[userInfo objectForKey:UIKeyboardAnimationCurveUserInfoKey] intValue]];
    _tableView.frame = frame;
    [UIView commitAnimations];

    UITableViewCell *textFieldCell = (id)((UITextField *)self.currentFirstResponder).superview.superview;
    NSIndexPath *textFieldIndexPath = [_tableView indexPathForCell:textFieldCell];

    // iOS 3 sends hide and show notifications right after each other
    // when switching between textFields, so cancel -scrollToOldPosition requests
    [NSObject cancelPreviousPerformRequestsWithTarget:self];
    _topmostRowBeforeKeyboardWasShown = [[_tableView indexPathsForVisibleRows] objectAtIndex:0];
    [_tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:textFieldIndexPath atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionMiddle animated:YES];
  }
}

- (void) scrollToOldPosition {
  [_tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:_topmostRowBeforeKeyboardWasShown atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
}

- (void)keyboardWillHide:(NSNotification*)notification {
  if ([self currentFirstResponder] != nil) {

    NSDictionary* userInfo = [notification userInfo];

    [UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
    [UIView setAnimationDuration:[[userInfo objectForKey:UIKeyboardAnimationDurationUserInfoKey] doubleValue]];
    [UIView setAnimationCurve:[[userInfo objectForKey:UIKeyboardAnimationCurveUserInfoKey] intValue]];
    _tableView.frame = self.view.bounds;
    [UIView commitAnimations];

    [self performSelector:@selector(scrollToOldPosition) withObject:nil afterDelay:0.1];
  }
}   

@end
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I used this code in iOS 4.x just fine, but in iOS5 it crashes in scrollToOldPosition because _topmostRowBeforeKeyboardWasShown is freed at that time already. Not sure what the solution is yet. Probably remember the index instead of the object. – Thomas Tempelmann Oct 26 '11 at 10:49
feedback

Keyboard notifications work, but Apple's sample code for that assumes that the scroll view is the root view of the window. This is usually not the case. You have to compensate for tab bars, etc., to get the right offset.

It is easier than it sounds. Here is the code I use in a UITableViewController. It has two instance variables, hiddenRect and keyboardShown.

// Called when the UIKeyboardDidShowNotification is sent.
- (void)keyboardWasShown:(NSNotification*)aNotification {
    if (keyboardShown)
        return;

    NSDictionary* info = [aNotification userInfo];

    // Get the frame of the keyboard.
    NSValue *centerValue = [info objectForKey:UIKeyboardCenterEndUserInfoKey];
    NSValue *boundsValue = [info objectForKey:UIKeyboardBoundsUserInfoKey];
    CGPoint keyboardCenter = [centerValue CGPointValue];
    CGRect keyboardBounds = [boundsValue CGRectValue];
    CGPoint keyboardOrigin = CGPointMake(keyboardCenter.x - keyboardBounds.size.width / 2.0,
                                         keyboardCenter.y - keyboardBounds.size.height / 2.0);
    CGRect keyboardScreenFrame = { keyboardOrigin, keyboardBounds.size };


    // Resize the scroll view.
    UIScrollView *scrollView = (UIScrollView *) self.tableView;
    CGRect viewFrame = scrollView.frame;
    CGRect keyboardFrame = [scrollView.superview convertRect:keyboardScreenFrame fromView:nil];
    hiddenRect = CGRectIntersection(viewFrame, keyboardFrame);

    CGRect remainder, slice;
    CGRectDivide(viewFrame, &slice, &remainder, CGRectGetHeight(hiddenRect), CGRectMaxYEdge);
    scrollView.frame = remainder;

    // Scroll the active text field into view.
    CGRect textFieldRect = [/* selected cell */ frame];
    [scrollView scrollRectToVisible:textFieldRect animated:YES];

    keyboardShown = YES;
}


// Called when the UIKeyboardDidHideNotification is sent
- (void)keyboardWasHidden:(NSNotification*)aNotification
{
    // Reset the height of the scroll view to its original value
    UIScrollView *scrollView = (UIScrollView *) self.tableView;
    CGRect viewFrame = [scrollView frame];
    scrollView.frame = CGRectUnion(viewFrame, hiddenRect);

    keyboardShown = NO;
}
link|improve this answer
UIKeyboardCenterEndUserInfoKey and UIKeyboardBoundsUserInfoKey are deprecated as of iOS 3.2. See my solution below that works across all current iOS releases ≥ 3.0. – Ortwin Gentz Dec 13 '10 at 16:17
feedback

A more stream-lined solution. It slips into the UITextField delegate methods, so it doesn't require messing w/ UIKeyboard notifications.

Implementation notes:

kSettingsRowHeight -- the height of a UITableViewCell.

offsetTarget and offsetThreshold are baed off of kSettingsRowHeight. If you use a different row height, set those values to point's y property. [alt: calculate the row offset in a different manner.]

- (BOOL)textFieldShouldBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField {
CGFloat offsetTarget	= 113.0f; // 3rd row
CGFloat offsetThreshold	= 248.0f; // 6th row (i.e. 2nd-to-last row)

CGPoint point = [self.tableView convertPoint:CGPointZero fromView:textField];

[UIView beginAnimations:nil context:nil];
[UIView setAnimationDuration:0.2];
[UIView setAnimationCurve:UIViewAnimationCurveEaseOut];

CGRect frame = self.tableView.frame;
if (point.y > offsetThreshold) {
	self.tableView.frame = CGRectMake(0.0f,
					  offsetTarget - point.y + kSettingsRowHeight,
					  frame.size.width,
					  frame.size.height);
} else if (point.y > offsetTarget) {
	self.tableView.frame = CGRectMake(0.0f,
					  offsetTarget - point.y,
					  frame.size.width,
					  frame.size.height);
} else {
	self.tableView.frame = CGRectMake(0.0f,
					  0.0f,
					  frame.size.width,
					  frame.size.height);
}

[UIView commitAnimations];

return YES;

}

- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField {
[textField resignFirstResponder];

[UIView beginAnimations:nil context:nil];
[UIView setAnimationBeginsFromCurrentState:YES];
[UIView setAnimationDuration:0.2];
[UIView setAnimationCurve:UIViewAnimationCurveEaseOut];

CGRect frame = self.tableView.frame;
self.tableView.frame = CGRectMake(0.0f,
				  0.0f,
				  frame.size.width,
				  frame.size.height);

[UIView commitAnimations];

return YES;

}

link|improve this answer
I doubt, this will work for Bluetooth keyboards. – Ortwin Gentz Dec 13 '10 at 16:09
feedback

If you use Three20, then use the autoresizesForKeyboard property. Just set in the your view controller's -initWithNibName:bundle method

self.autoresizesForKeyboard = YES

This takes care of:

  1. Listening for keyboard notifications and adjusting the table view's frame
  2. Scrolling to the first responder

Done and done.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I ran into something like your problem (I wanted a screen similar to the iPhone's settings.app with a bunch of editable cells stacked on on top of another) and found that this approach worked well:

http://cocoawithlove.com/2008/10/sliding-uitextfields-around-to-avoid.html

link|improve this answer
Thanks, I've tried that but it's still quite buggy. I use the cell bounds instead of the text field bounds cause my cell contains multiple text fields. It works but after a while or a few manoeuvres on the different textfields suddenly the origin of my table is down a fourth of the screen... :( – Jonathan Feb 27 '09 at 14:56
Update - thanks again, this now worked. I just had to make a minor change by making sure I reset the origin of my view when the keyboard hides.. – Jonathan Feb 27 '09 at 23:09
Update again - Did you get this to work for landscape mode? I get really wierd values on the height of my view in landscape mode and the calculations go wrong... – Jonathan Mar 3 '09 at 8:54
No, haven't done landscape mode yet, sorry. – drewh Mar 3 '09 at 14:32
Hi, Main problem seems to be that moving to landscape mode the coordinates are wrong because we use the window to convertRect. The changes I've made: calculate textFieldRect from the cell.bounds and set origin to cell.frame.origin.y. convertRect for viewRect from self.view and not self.view.window. – Jonathan Mar 4 '09 at 9:02
feedback

Since you have textfields in a table, the best way really is to resize the table - you need to set the tableView.frame to be smaller in height by the size of the keyboard (I think around 165 pixels) and then expand it again when the keyboard is dismissed.

You can optionally also disable user interaction for the tableView at that time as well, if you do not want the user scrolling.

link|improve this answer
I second this, and register for UIKeyboardWillShowNotification to find the size of the keyboard dynamically. – benzado Mar 3 '09 at 5:24
The number returned by the notification object doesn't work though. Or at least it didn't in 2.2, the number returned was incorrect and I had to hard-code the 165 value to adjust the height correctly (it was off by five to ten pixels) – Kendall Helmstetter Gelner Mar 11 '09 at 5:37
feedback

If you use a uitableview to place your textfields (from Jeff Lamarche), you can just scroll the tableview using the delegate method like so.

(Note: my text fields are stored in an array with the same index as there row in the tableview)

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

        int index;
        for(UITextField *aField in textFields){

            if (textField == aField){
                index = [textFields indexOfObject:aField]-1;
            }
        }

         if(index >= 0) 
            [self.tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:[NSIndexPath indexPathForRow:index inSection:0] atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];

        [super textFieldDidBeginEditing:textField];
    }
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You don't update the tableView frame. Then, the scrollBars and the scrolling behavior are wrong when the keyboard is shown. See my solution. – Ortwin Gentz Dec 13 '10 at 16:15
feedback

This works perfectly, and on iPad too.

- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField 
{

    if(textField == textfield1){
            [accountName1TextField becomeFirstResponder];
        }else if(textField == textfield2){
            [self.tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:[NSIndexPath indexPathForRow:0 inSection:1] atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
            [textfield3 becomeFirstResponder];

        }else if(textField == textfield3){
            [self.tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:[NSIndexPath indexPathForRow:1 inSection:1] atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
            [textfield4 becomeFirstResponder];

        }else if(textField == textfield4){
            [self.tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:[NSIndexPath indexPathForRow:2 inSection:1] atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
            [textfield5 becomeFirstResponder];

        }else if(textField == textfield5){
            [self.tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:[NSIndexPath indexPathForRow:3 inSection:1] atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
            [textfield6 becomeFirstResponder];

        }else if(textField == textfield6){
            [self.tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:[NSIndexPath indexPathForRow:4 inSection:1] atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
            [textfield7 becomeFirstResponder];

        }else if(textField == textfield7){
            [self.tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:[NSIndexPath indexPathForRow:5 inSection:1] atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
            [textfield8 becomeFirstResponder];

        }else if(textField == textfield8){
            [self.tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:[NSIndexPath indexPathForRow:6 inSection:1] atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
            [textfield9 becomeFirstResponder];

        }else if(textField == textfield9){
            [self.tableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:[NSIndexPath indexPathForRow:7 inSection:1] atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
            [textField resignFirstResponder];
        }
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feedback

THE RIGHT ANSWER is Sam Ho's answer:

"If you use UITableViewController instead of UIViewController, it will automatically do so.".

Just make sure to connect your UITableView to the TableView property of the UITableViewController (so e.g. do not add it as a subview of the View property of the UITableViewController).

Also make sure to set the AutoresizingMask property of your UITableView to FlexibleHeight

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sorry but sometimes you HAVE TO use UIViewController instead of UITableViewController, so don't repost other person posts – relikd Dec 18 '10 at 15:58
1  
A UITableViewController is a UIViewController. Kudos to those who found the simple answer. If you're controlling a table view, you should be using a UITableViewController. I wasted a gigantic amount of time following the suggestions of the people above, who all insisted on reinventing the wheel. – Nate Mar 12 '11 at 7:19
1  
This is definitely not the right answer 100% of the time. When you use the UITableViewController, it's almost impossible to add any other views to the UI. You're basically stuck with a whole screen filled with table cells. Hardly what most people would want. Think before you say such drastic things. – Hisoka Jun 19 '11 at 0:42
feedback

I had the same problem but noticed that it appears only in one view. So I began to look for the differences in the controllers.

I found out that the scrolling behavior is set in - (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated of the super instance.

So be sure to implement like this:

- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated {
    [super viewWillAppear:animated];
    // your code
}

And it doesn't matter if you use UIViewController or UITableViewController; checked it by putting a UITableView as a subview of self.view in the UIViewController. It was the same behavior. The view didn't allow to scroll if the call [super viewWillAppear:animated]; was missing.

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Worked perfectly for me, thanks. – Eduardo Scoz Jul 9 '11 at 16:22
feedback

So after hours of grueling work trying to use these current solutions (and utterly failing) I finally got things working well, and updated them to use the new animation blocks. My answer is entirely based on Ortwin's answer above.

So for whatever reason the code above was just not working for me. My setup seemed fairly similar to others, but maybe because I was on an iPad or 4.3... no idea. It was doing some wacky math and shooting my tableview off the screen.

See end result of my solution: http://screencast.com/t/hjBCuRrPC (Please ignore the photo. :-P)

So I went with the gist of what Ortwin was doing, but changed how it was doing some math to add up the origin.y & size.height of my table view with the height of the keyboard. When I subtract the height of the window from that result , it tells me how much intersection I have going on. If its greater than 0 (aka there is some overlap) I perform the animation of the frame height.

In addition there were some redraw issues that were solved by 1) Waiting to scroll to the cell until the animation was done and 2) using the UIViewAnimationOptionBeginFromCurrentState option when hiding the keyboard.

A couple things to note.

  • _topmostRowBeforeKeyboardWasShown & _originalFrame are instance variables declared in the header.
  • self.guestEntryTableView is my tableView (I'm in an external file)
  • IASKCGRectSwap is Ortwin's method for flipping the coordinates of a frame
  • I only update the height of the tableView if at least 50px of it is going to be showing
  • Since I'm not in a UIViewController I don't have self.view, so I just return the tableView to its original frame

Again, I wouldn't have gotten near this answer if I Ortwin didn't provide the crux of it. Here's the code:

- (IBAction)textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
    self.activeTextField = textField;

    if ([self.guestEntryTableView indexPathsForVisibleRows].count) {
        _topmostRowBeforeKeyboardWasShown = (NSIndexPath*)[[self.guestEntryTableView indexPathsForVisibleRows] objectAtIndex:0];
    } else {
        // this should never happen
        _topmostRowBeforeKeyboardWasShown = [NSIndexPath indexPathForRow:0 inSection:0];
        [textField resignFirstResponder];
    }
}

- (IBAction)textFieldDidEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
    self.activeTextField = nil;
}

- (void)keyboardWillShow:(NSNotification*)notification {
    NSDictionary* userInfo = [notification userInfo];

    NSValue* keyboardFrameValue = [userInfo objectForKey:UIKeyboardFrameEndUserInfoKey];

    // Reduce the tableView height by the part of the keyboard that actually covers the tableView
    UIInterfaceOrientation orientation = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] statusBarOrientation];
    CGRect windowRect = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] keyWindow].bounds;
    CGRect viewRectAbsolute = [self.guestEntryTableView convertRect:self.guestEntryTableView.bounds toView:[[UIApplication sharedApplication] keyWindow]];
    CGRect keyboardFrame = [keyboardFrameValue CGRectValue];
    if (UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeLeft == orientation ||UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeRight == orientation ) {
        windowRect = IASKCGRectSwap(windowRect);
        viewRectAbsolute = IASKCGRectSwap(viewRectAbsolute);
        keyboardFrame = IASKCGRectSwap(keyboardFrame);
    }

    // fix the coordinates of our rect to have a top left origin 0,0
    viewRectAbsolute = FixOriginRotation(viewRectAbsolute, orientation, windowRect.size.width, windowRect.size.height);

    CGRect frame = self.guestEntryTableView.frame;
    _originalFrame = self.guestEntryTableView.frame;

    int remainder = (viewRectAbsolute.origin.y + viewRectAbsolute.size.height + keyboardFrame.size.height) - windowRect.size.height;

    if (remainder > 0 && !(remainder > frame.size.height + 50)) {
        frame.size.height = frame.size.height - remainder;
        float duration = [[userInfo objectForKey:UIKeyboardAnimationDurationUserInfoKey] doubleValue];
        [UIView animateWithDuration: duration
                        animations:^{
                            self.guestEntryTableView.frame = frame;
                        }
                        completion:^(BOOL finished){
                            UITableViewCell *textFieldCell = (UITableViewCell*) [[self.activeTextField superview] superview];
                            NSIndexPath *textFieldIndexPath = [self.guestEntryTableView indexPathForCell:textFieldCell];
                            [self.guestEntryTableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:textFieldIndexPath atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionMiddle animated:YES];
                        }];
    }

}

- (void)keyboardWillHide:(NSNotification*)notification {
    NSDictionary* userInfo = [notification userInfo];
    float duration = [[userInfo objectForKey:UIKeyboardAnimationDurationUserInfoKey] doubleValue];
    [UIView animateWithDuration: duration
                          delay: 0.0
                        options: (UIViewAnimationOptionBeginFromCurrentState)
                     animations:^{
                         self.guestEntryTableView.frame = _originalFrame;
                     }
                     completion:^(BOOL finished){
                         [self.guestEntryTableView scrollToRowAtIndexPath:_topmostRowBeforeKeyboardWasShown atScrollPosition:UITableViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
                     }];

}   

#pragma mark CGRect Utility function
CGRect IASKCGRectSwap(CGRect rect) {
    CGRect newRect;
    newRect.origin.x = rect.origin.y;
    newRect.origin.y = rect.origin.x;
    newRect.size.width = rect.size.height;
    newRect.size.height = rect.size.width;
    return newRect;
}

CGRect FixOriginRotation(CGRect rect, UIInterfaceOrientation orientation, int parentWidth, int parentHeight) {
    CGRect newRect;
    switch(orientation)
    {
        case UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeLeft:
            newRect = CGRectMake(parentWidth - (rect.size.width + rect.origin.x), rect.origin.y, rect.size.width, rect.size.height);
            break;
        case UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeRight:
            newRect = CGRectMake(rect.origin.x, parentHeight - (rect.size.height + rect.origin.y), rect.size.width, rect.size.height);
            break;
        case UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait:
            newRect = rect;
            break;
        case UIInterfaceOrientationPortraitUpsideDown:
            newRect = CGRectMake(parentWidth - (rect.size.width + rect.origin.x), parentHeight - (rect.size.height + rect.origin.y), rect.size.width, rect.size.height);
            break;
    }
    return newRect;
}
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Added my FixOriginRotation function which fixes the coordinate system of the view before you update its frame etc. I think this is part of why I was having troubles at first. Wasn't aware the iOS Window Coordinate System Rotated with the device! – Bob Spryn Jul 19 '11 at 9:06
feedback

what you meen in your code with "CELL_FIELD_ONE" ? Is this an integer: 0, 1 ,2 ,3...for ONE, TWO,...

frame.origin.y += rowHeight * CELL_FIELD_ONE;

thanks.

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I've added an explanation for this in the answer. – Michael Baltaks Mar 24 '09 at 2:13
feedback

UITableViewController does the Scrolling automatically, indeed. The difference compared to using a UIViewController is, that you have to create Navbar-Buttonitems programmatically by using the Navigationcontroller, when using a TableViewController.

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feedback

I tried almost the same approach and came up with a simpler and smaller code for the same. I created a IBOutlet iTextView and associated with the UITextView in the IB.

 -(void)keyboardWillShow:(NSNotification *)notification
    {
        NSLog(@"Keyboard");
        CGRect keyFrame = [[[notification userInfo]objectForKey:UIKeyboardFrameEndUserInfoKey]CGRectValue];

        [UIView beginAnimations:@"resize view" context:nil];
        [UIView setAnimationCurve:1];
        [UIView setAnimationDuration:1.0];
        CGRect frame = iTableView.frame;
        frame.size.height = frame.size.height -  keyFrame.size.height;
        iTableView.frame = frame;
        [iTableView scrollRectToVisible:frame animated:YES];
        [UIView commitAnimations];

    }
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feedback

I just looked again into the iOS 5.0 lib reference and found this section titled "Moving Content That Is Located Under the Keyboard": http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/StringsTextFonts/Conceptual/TextAndWebiPhoneOS/KeyboardManagement/KeyboardManagement.html

Is this new since iOS 5, perhaps? I haven't read into it yet as I'm in the middle of something else, but perhaps others know more and can enlighten me and others here.

Does the Apple doc supersede what's been discussed here or is the information here still useful to iOS 5 SDK users?

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feedback

This Applle documentation outlines the steps to implement a solution for this question.

http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/StringsTextFonts/Conceptual/TextAndWebiPhoneOS/KeyboardManagement/KeyboardManagement.html

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feedback

i did create a small project that solves this issue with the keyboard, in my case i only need to make the table view go up when the keyboard shows up.

Hope this helps!

http://git.io/BrH9eQ

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feedback

Another easy method (only works with one section)

//cellForRowAtIndexPath
UItextField *tf;
[cell addSubview:tf];
tf.tag = indexPath.row;
tf.delegate = self;

//textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)text
[[self.tableView scrollToRowsAtIndexPath:[NSIndexPath indexPathForRow:text.tag in section:SECTIONINTEGER] animated:YES];
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feedback

This soluton works for me, PLEASE note the line

[tableView setContentOffset:CGPointMake(0.0, activeField.frame.origin.y-kbSize.height+160) animated:YES];

You can change the 160 value to match it work with you

- (void)keyboardWasShown:(NSNotification*)aNotification
{
    NSDictionary* info = [aNotification userInfo];
    CGSize kbSize = [[info objectForKey:UIKeyboardFrameBeginUserInfoKey] CGRectValue].size;
    CGRect bkgndRect = activeField.superview.frame;
                        bkgndRect.size.height += kbSize.height;
     [activeField.superview setFrame:bkgndRect];
     [tableView setContentOffset:CGPointMake(0.0, activeField.frame.origin.y-kbSize.height+160) animated:YES];
}

- (void)textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
   activeField = textField;
}
-(void)textFieldDidEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField
 {
     activeField = nil;
 }
// Called when the UIKeyboardWillHideNotification is sent
- (void)keyboardWillBeHidden:(NSNotification*)aNotification
{
    UIEdgeInsets contentInsets = UIEdgeInsetsZero;
    tableView.contentInset = contentInsets;
    tableView.scrollIndicatorInsets = contentInsets;
    NSDictionary* info = [aNotification userInfo];
    CGSize kbSize = [[info objectForKey:UIKeyboardFrameBeginUserInfoKey] CGRectValue].size;
    CGRect bkgndRect = activeField.superview.frame;
    //bkgndRect.size.height += kbSize.height;
    [activeField.superview setFrame:bkgndRect];
    [tableView setContentOffset:CGPointMake(0.0, activeField.frame.origin.y-kbSize.height) animated:YES];
}
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