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I'm trying to create a springboard-like interface within my app. I'm trying to use UIButtons added to a UIScrollView. The problem I'm running in to is with the buttons not passing any touches to the UIScrollView - if I try to flick/slide and happen to press on the button it doesn't register for the UIScrollView, but if I flick the space between buttons it will work. The buttons do click/work if I touch them.

Is there a property or setting that forces the button to send the touch events up to its parent (superview)? Do the buttons need to be added to something else before being added the UIScrollView?

Here is my code:

	//init scrolling area
	UIScrollView *scrollView = [[UIScrollView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, 480, 480)];
	scrollView.contentSize = CGSizeMake(480, 1000);
	scrollView.bounces = NO;
	scrollView.delaysContentTouches = NO;

	//create background image
	UIImageView *rowsBackground = [[UIImageView alloc] initWithImage:[self scaleAndRotateImage:[UIImage imageNamed:@"mylongbackground.png"]]];
	rowsBackground.userInteractionEnabled = YES;

	//create button
      UIButton *btn = [[UIButton buttonWithType:UIButtonTypeCustom] retain];
      btn.frame = CGRectMake(100, 850, 150, 150);
	btn.bounds = CGRectMake(0, 0, 150.0, 150.0);
	[btn setImage:[self scaleAndRotateImage:[UIImage imageNamed:@"basicbutton.png"]] forState:UIControlStateNormal];
      [btn addTarget:self action:@selector(buttonClick) forControlEvents:UIControlEventTouchUpInside];

	//add "stuff" to scrolling area
	[scrollView addSubview:rowsBackground];
	[scrollView addSubview:btn];

	//add scrolling area to cocos2d
	//this is just a UIWindow
	[[[Director sharedDirector] openGLView] addSubview:scrollView];

	//mem-mgmt
	[rowsBackground release];
	[btn release];
	[scrollView release];
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4 Answers

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In order for UIScrollView to determine the difference between a click that passes through to its content view(s) and a touch that turns into a swipe or pinch, it needs to delay the touch and see if your finger has moved during that delay. By setting delaysContentTouches to NO in your above example, you're preventing this from happening. Therefore, the scroll view is always passing the touch to the button, instead of canceling it when it turns out that the user is performing a swipe gesture. Try setting delaysContentTouches to YES.

It might also be a good idea, structurally, to add all the views to be hosted in your scroll view to a common content view and only use that one view as the scroll view's subview.

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vote up 1 vote down

UIScrollView handles a lot of events itself. You need to handle touchesDidEnd and hit test for buttons inside the UIScrollView manually.

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Another way is:
1. Substitute de button by a simple custom UIView
2. Put the flag "userInterationEnable = yes;" on the init method
3. In the view override the UIResponder method "touchesEnded" here you can trigger the action you need like a button.

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In my experience the first answer, i.e., simply setting delaysContentTouches to YES, does not change anything with regard to the problem. The buttons will still not deliver tracking results to the scroll view. The third answer is both simple and very usable. Thanks sieroaoj!

However, for the third answer to work you also need delaysContentTouches set to YES. Otherwise the method touchesEnded will also be called for tracking within the view. Therefore I could solve the problem by:

  1. Substitute de button by a simple custom UIView
  2. Put the flag "userInterationEnable = yes;" on the init method
  3. In the view override the UIResponder method "touchesEnded" here you can trigger the action you

Fourth. set delaysContentTouches to YES

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