72

I'm using a UICollectionView to scroll through a set of thumbnails quickly. Once scrolling ends, I'd like to display a larger hi-res version of the current thumbnail.

How can I detect when the user has completed scrolling? I do implement didEndDisplayingCell, but that only tells me when a particular cell has scrolled off; it doesn't tell me when the scroll motion actually completes.

7 Answers 7

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NS_CLASS_AVAILABLE_IOS(6_0) @interface UICollectionView : UIScrollView

UICollectionView is a subclass of UIScrollView. So if you have set the delegate and implemented UIScrollViewDelegate, you should be able to detect this the same way as UIScrollView.

For eg:-

Objective-C:

- (void)scrollViewDidEndDecelerating:(UIScrollView *)scrollView;
- (void)scrollViewDidEndDragging:(UIScrollView *)scrollView willDecelerate:(BOOL)decelerate;

Swift:

func scrollViewWillBeginDecelerating(_ scrollView: UIScrollView)
func scrollViewDidEndDragging(_ scrollView: UIScrollView, willDecelerate decelerate: Bool)

As per documentation, the above method should tell when the scroll view has ended decelerating the scrolling movement. Note that scrollViewDidEndDecelerating would not be called in some cases as mentioned in comments.

5
  • 7
    Brilliant. You don't know how much nasty code this saved me. I was trying to monitor it using the shouldInvalidateLayoutForBoundsChange callback in my UICollectionViewFlowLayout. What a n00b.
    – Kyle Clegg
    May 11, 2013 at 21:54
  • 2
    Please see D6mi's note below about scrollViewDidEndScrollingAnimation. scrollViewDidEndDecelerating does not get called for programmatic scrolling.
    – RajV
    Oct 24, 2016 at 11:42
  • 9
    Indeed, I don't understand why the current answer is the accepted one, it does not work scrollViewDidEndDecelerating is not called but like D6mi said, scrollViewDidEndScrollingAnimation is called Dec 16, 2016 at 15:03
  • This answer is not complete.
    – Nathanael
    Jun 28, 2017 at 22:54
  • Brilliant answer. @Nathanael, the answer is complete since he pointed out that UICollectionView is a subclass of UIScrollView and also quoted an eg:- delegate method. Rest of the answers just took this answer and added other delegate methods to it. Ideally rest should be just a comment on this answer. The keypart is collectionview is just a scrollview, rest can be figured out.
    – adev
    Jun 30, 2017 at 7:04
61

Just to cover your bases you should implement both these UIScrollViewDelegate methods. In some cases there may not be a deceleration (and scrollViewDidEndDecelerating would not be called), for e.g., the page is fully scrolled in place. In those case do your update right there in scrollViewDidEndDragging.

- (void)scrollViewDidEndDragging:(UIScrollView *)scrollView willDecelerate:(BOOL)decelerate
{
  if (!decelerate) {
    [self updateStuff];
  }
}

- (void)scrollViewDidEndDecelerating:(UIScrollView *)scrollView
{
  [self updateStuff];
}
1
  • 7
    Thank you for sharing this! This should be the accepted answer b/c OP asked "scrolling has stopped" -- without both methods in place the user can easily scroll the collection view down and release finger without flicking and scrollViewDidEndDecelerating will NOT get called, scrollViewDidEndDragging does. Thank you for posting this answer.
    – John Erck
    Jul 18, 2014 at 21:34
36

An important fact to note here.

This method gets called on User initiated scrolls (i.e a Pan gesture):

- (void)scrollViewDidEndDecelerating:(UIScrollView *)scrollView;

or in Swift:

func scrollViewDidEndDecelerating(_ scrollView: UIScrollView)


On the other hand, this one gets called on all manually (programatically) initiated scrolls (like scrollRectToVisible or scrollToItemAtIndexPath):

- (void)scrollViewDidEndScrollingAnimation:(UIScrollView *)scrollView

or in Swift:

func scrollViewDidEndScrollingAnimation(_ scrollView: UIScrollView)

14

Swift 3 version of Abey M and D6mi 's answers:

When scroll is caused by user action

public func scrollViewDidEndDragging(_ scrollView: UIScrollView, willDecelerate decelerate: Bool) {
    if (!decelerate) {
        //cause by user
        print("SCROLL scrollViewDidEndDragging")
    }
}

public func scrollViewDidEndDecelerating(_ scrollView: UIScrollView) {
    //caused by user
    print("SCROLL scrollViewDidEndDecelerating")
}

When scroll is caused by code action (programmatically): (like "scrollRectToVisible" or "scrollToItemAtIndexPath")

public func scrollViewDidEndScrollingAnimation(_ scrollView: UIScrollView) {
    //caused by code
    print("SCROLL scrollViewDidEndScrollingAnimation")
}

Notes:

  • Put these functions in your UIScrollViewDelegate or UICollectionViewDelegate delegate.
  • if you don't have a separate delegate, make your current class extend a UIScrollViewDelegate op top of your class file

.

open class MyClass: NSObject , UICollectionViewDelegate

and somewhere in your viewWillAppear make the class its own delegate

override open func viewWillAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
    super.viewWillAppear(animated)
    // ...
    self.myScrollView.delegate = self
    // ...
}
9

Swift 3 version:

func scrollViewDidEndDecelerating(_ scrollView: UIScrollView) {
    // Your code here
}
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0

if you want to use the visible indexpath:

- (void)scrollViewDidEndDecelerating:(UIScrollView *)scrollView
{
    [self scrollingFinish];
}
- (void)scrollingFinish {


    if([self.collectionView indexPathsForVisibleSupplementaryElementsOfKind:UICollectionElementKindSectionHeader]){
        NSIndexPath *firstVisibleIndexPath = [[self.collectionView indexPathsForVisibleSupplementaryElementsOfKind:UICollectionElementKindSectionHeader] firstObject];
        [self.collectionView scrollToItemAtIndexPath:firstVisibleIndexPath atScrollPosition:UICollectionViewScrollPositionTop animated:YES];
        [NSObject cancelPreviousPerformRequestsWithTarget:self];
    }
}
0

Get your collection view index and Dont forget to import UISCrollViewDelegate in your class

public func scrollViewDidEndDecelerating(_ scrollView: UIScrollView) {
    let xPoint = scrollView.contentOffset.x + scrollView.frame.width / 2
    let yPoint = scrollView.frame.height / 2
    let center = CGPoint(x: xPoint, y: yPoint)
    if let ip = self.collectionView.indexPathForItem(at: center) {
        pageIndex = ip.row
    }
    print(">>>>>>>>>\(pageIndex)")
}

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