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I'm looking for an easy solution to delete NSTableView rows by pushing the delete key.

All I have seen when searching in Google were answers like this: http://likethought.com/lockfocus/2008/04/a-slightly-improved-nstableview/

This seems to me an Engineering solution, but I would like to know if this is the best way. Does any one know a better answer?

0

4 Answers 4

27

What I usually do is create a new menu item in your application's menu bar. Something like:

File -> Delete ${Name of Item}

Then you can link that NSMenuItem in Interface Builder to point to an IBAction method defined somewhere on either your app delegate or some other controller. The implementation for this method should delete the item from your model, and refresh the NSTableView.

The advantage to making an NSMenuItem out of the action is that:

  1. You can give the item a keyboard shortcut in Interface Builder. (Like the delete key.)
  2. Users who are not familiar with your application, afraid to press the delete key, or do not have access to a keyboard for whatever reason, can still make use of this functionality.
4
  • 1
    Hi, Craig. Your answer was not what I was really expecting, but it sounds pretty good! =D Thank you very much.
    – Leandro
    Jan 13, 2011 at 12:18
  • 2
    Haha yea, at first it seems like a pretty indirect approach, but it works extremely well, and takes care of a lot of headache.
    – Craig Otis
    Jan 13, 2011 at 12:24
  • 1
    @peetonn If you have two table views, you can just check which one has focus in your method implementation. And you can also add a focus listener if you want to dynamically update the menu item.
    – Craig Otis
    Oct 24, 2014 at 23:52
  • is this a "global" action or is it automatically applied directly to whichever Control has focus?
    – pkamb
    Mar 3, 2020 at 2:57
12

I've implemented something similar to LTKeyPressTableView. However, I use array controllers, so in my subclass I added IBOutlet NSArrayController * relatedArrayController. Instead of handling delete request in a delegate, I handle it directly in the subclass since my subclass specifically deals with adding handling of Delete key. When I detect keypress for delete key, I'm just calling [relatedArrayController delete:nil];.

IRTableView.h:

#import <Cocoa/Cocoa.h>

@interface IRTableView : NSTableView {
    IBOutlet NSArrayController * relatedArrayController;
}

@end

and IRTableView.m:

#import "IRTableView.h"


@implementation IRTableView


- (void)keyDown:(NSEvent *)event
{
    // Based on LTKeyPressTableView.
    //https://github.com/jacobx/thoughtkit/blob/master/LTKeyPressTableView

    id delegate = [self delegate];

    // (removed unused LTKeyPressTableView code)

    unichar key = [[event charactersIgnoringModifiers] characterAtIndex:0];
    if(key == NSDeleteCharacter)
    {
        if([self selectedRow] == -1)
        {
            NSBeep();
        }

        BOOL isEditing = ([[self.window firstResponder] isKindOfClass:[NSText class]] && 
                          [[[self.window firstResponder] delegate] isKindOfClass:[IRTableView class]]);
        if (!isEditing) 
        {
            [relatedArrayController remove:nil];
            return;
        }

    }

    // still here?
    [super keyDown:event];
}

@end

End result is quite IB-friendly for me, and a quite simple solution for use in a Cocoa Bindings+Core Data application.

12

There is no need to subclass and catch keyDown in NSViewController.

The Delete menu item in the menu Edit is connected to the selector delete: of First Responder. If there is no Delete menu item, create one and connect it to delete: of First Responder (red cube).

  • Assign a key equivalent to the Delete menu item ( or ⌘⌫)
  • In the view controller implement the IBAction method

    Swift: @IBAction func delete(_ sender: AnyObject)

    Objective-C: -(IBAction)delete:(id)sender

    and put in the logic to delete the table view row(s).

12
  • @iSavaDevRU Please write in English.
    – vadian
    Feb 10, 2019 at 20:03
  • Please write in Russian :) Who needs it, he will understand. I feel uncomfortable reading English. But I read and translate, but is it difficult for you? :)
    – iSavaDev
    Feb 11, 2019 at 0:24
  • vadian, Ваш пример годится отчасти. Некая путаница с логикой будет, лишняя нагрузка. Подкласс будет отвечать только за свой объект. Лишних забот не нужно делать.
    – iSavaDev
    Feb 11, 2019 at 0:31
  • I translate into English. vadian, your example is partly suitable. There will be some confusion with logic, an extra load. A subclass will be responsible only for its object. No extra worries need to be done.
    – iSavaDev
    Feb 11, 2019 at 0:32
  • The community language of Stackoverflow is English, but there is also a Russian forum
    – vadian
    Feb 11, 2019 at 8:09
10

After 10.10, NSViewController is part of the responder chain. So the easiest way is to implement keyDown in your subclassed NSViewController

1
  • 1
    Good point about using the responder chain to avoid subclassing (where possible). Jan 4, 2015 at 18:27

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