Just wanted to share a little function I wrote that helps debug these situations. As others have mentioned, you have to make sure only ONE scroll view has scrollsToTop turned on. If you embed complex view hierarchies it may be difficult to figure out which scroll view is the culprit. Just call this method after your view hierarchy is created, like in viewDidAppear. The level parameter is just to help indentation and you should seed it off with 0.
-(void)inspectViewAndSubViews:(UIView*) v level:(int)level {
NSMutableString* str = [NSMutableString string];
for (int i = 0; i < level; i++) {
[str appendString:@" "];
}
[str appendFormat:@"%@", [v class]];
if ([v isKindOfClass:[UITableView class]]) {
[str appendString:@" : UITableView "];
}
if ([v isKindOfClass:[UIScrollView class]]) {
[str appendString:@" : UIScrollView "];
UIScrollView* scrollView = (UIScrollView*)v;
if (scrollView.scrollsToTop) {
[str appendString:@" >>>scrollsToTop<<<<"];
}
}
NSLog(@"%@", str);
for (UIView* sv in [v subviews]) {
[self inspectViewAndSubViews:sv level:level+1];
}}
Call it on your view controller's main view.
In the log, you should see >>>scrollsToTop<<< next to every view that has it turned on, making it easy to find the bug.