32

Does anyone know a way to temporarily turn off zooming when using a UIScrollView?

I see that you can disable scrolling using the following:

self.scrollView.scrollEnabled = false;

but I'm not seeing a similar command for zooming. Any thoughts?

10 Answers 10

51

If you want to disable the user's ability to zoom through gestures then in iOS 5 and above you can disable the pinch gesture. This still allows you to control the scroll view from code...

scrollView.pinchGestureRecognizer.enabled = NO;

similarly for pan...

scrollView.panGestureRecognizer.enabled = NO;

This must be called in - (void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated or later as otherwise the system resets it to enabled.

Swift 4.x and above:

imageZoomView.pinchGestureRecognizer?.isEnabled = false / true

10
  • 1
    this is the best answer and should totes be the accepted one! this doesn't seem to affect any of the zoom delegates or muck with any of your current min/max zoomScale settings, which as someone pointed out, may not necessarily reflect if the user zoomed it or not.
    – taber
    Mar 28, 2015 at 20:15
  • 1
    In addition to being the cleanest alternative, it is also the most simple! Given that people are still learning from it almost six years later (and it works fine in iOS 8), I agree that it should get the green check mark.
    – Tony Adams
    May 13, 2015 at 17:06
  • @oarfish what part of it doesn't work? zooming still works after you have called scrollView.pinchGestureRecognizer.enabled = NO; ? May 14, 2015 at 15:43
  • 1
    If you set zoomScale, better set gesture enabled again. Jan 18, 2017 at 9:02
  • 1
    In case you are subclassing the UIScrollView, self.pinchGestureRecognizer.enabled = false (and the other one), can be called in -(void)didMoveToWindow. May 1, 2020 at 16:12
30

Following fbrereto's advice above, I created two functions lockZoom and unlockZoom. When locking Zoom i copied my max and min zoom scales to variables then set the max and min zoom scale to 1.0. Unlocking zoom just reverses the process.

-(void)lockZoom
{
    maximumZoomScale = self.scrollView.maximumZoomScale;
    minimumZoomScale = self.scrollView.minimumZoomScale;

    self.scrollView.maximumZoomScale = 1.0;
    self.scrollView.minimumZoomScale = 1.0;
}

-(void)unlockZoom
{

    self.scrollView.maximumZoomScale = maximumZoomScale;
    self.scrollView.minimumZoomScale = minimumZoomScale;

}
0
17

Also you can return "nil" as zooming view in UIScrollViewDelegate:

- (UIView *) viewForZoomingInScrollView:(UIScrollView *) scrollView
{
    return canZoom?view:nil;
}
4
  • 1
    I really like this approach, but be careful. Delegate methods like "scrollViewDidEndZooming" will still be called annoyingly.
    – Ralphleon
    Apr 19, 2012 at 1:19
  • I have seen this as well. UIKit is automatically zooming my scroll view out to zoomScale 1.0 after I set scrollEnabled to NO Jan 24, 2017 at 22:35
  • The problem with this solution is whenever you access scrollView.zoomScale, this method gets called, which returns nil and as a consequence returns 1.0 as the zoomScale of your scroll view Jan 24, 2017 at 23:32
  • I observe one issue with this problem. When keyboard comes up for text field it doesn't scroll the screen. (Text field is inside a web view which loads my page on server) Aug 15, 2017 at 21:33
11

Check setting minimumZoomScale and maximumZoomScale; According to the docs:

maximumZoomScale must be greater than minimumZoomScale for zooming to be enabled.

So, setting the values to be the same should disable zooming.

1
  • 6
    I have max and min both set to 1 in the storyboard, but my scrollView still zooming. Jun 24, 2014 at 17:45
5

I have tried setting minimumZoomScale and maximumZoomScale properties of UIScrollView to 1 or isMultipleTouchEnabled property of UIView to false or return nil from viewForZooming(in:) of UIScrollViewDelegate but none worked. In my case, after several trial and error, the following works in my case [Tested on iOS 10.3]:

class MyViewController: UIViewController {
   var webView: WKWebView?

   override viewDidLoad() {
      super.viewDidLoad()

      //...
      self.webView.scrollView.delegate = self
      //...
   }
}

extension MyViewController: UIScrollViewDelegate { 
   func scrollViewWillBeginZooming(_ scrollView: UIScrollView, with view: UIView?) {
      scrollView.pinchGestureRecognizer?.isEnabled = false
   }
}
3
  • I think this is specific to the WKWebView's scrollview. I have been messing with this for days. The only downside to your solution I have found is that sometimes the webpage does not scale properly on rotation. This happens with or without your solution, but since the user can't zoom out to fix the scale, we have to scroll horizontally. Good find with this!! Apr 5, 2018 at 23:32
  • Disable magnification gesture in WKWebView: stackoverflow.com/questions/25553711/… Jun 30, 2020 at 9:16
  • pretty brilliant, rarely mentioned, and still works in 2023 iOS 17 (with UIScrollView) Dec 28, 2023 at 0:46
2

I know this is a really old question but I made a slight variation for my purposes.

I wanted to be able to easily tell if the zooming was in fact enabled/disabled without relying on a comparison between scrollView.minimumZoomScale == scrollView.maximumZoomScale, which could possibly not reflect whether zooming was actually enabled/disabled.

So I did this

// .h
@property (assign, nonatomic, getter=isZoomEnabled) BOOL zoomEnabled;

// .m
@synthesize zoomEnabled = _zoomEnabled;

- (void)setZoomEnabled:(BOOL)zoomEnabled;
{
  _zoomEnabled = zoomEnabled;

  UIScrollView *scrollView = self.scrollView;

  if (zoomEnabled) {
    scrollView.minimumZoomScale = self.minimumZoomScale;
    scrollView.maximumZoomScale = self.maximumZoomScale;
  } else {
    scrollView.minimumZoomScale = 0.0f;
    scrollView.maximumZoomScale = 0.0f;
  }
}

The values for self.minimumZoomScale and self.maximumZoomScale are set at the time the UIScrollView is configured.

This gives me the ability to set/ask if zooming is enabled.

myViewController.zoomEnabled = YES;
myViewController.isZoomEnabled;
2

here, my solution for stop zooming on scrollview.

self.scrollView.minimumZoomScale=self.scrollView.maximumZoomScale;
1
  • For me, the nice thing about this solution to eliminating the zoom is that I am still able to use the pinchGestureRecognizer. Oct 7, 2015 at 8:04
1

Swift 3 Version:

func lockScrollViewZooming() {
    scrollView.minimumZoomScale = 1.0
    scrollView.maximumZoomScale = 1.0
    scrollView.bounces = false
    scrollView.bouncesZoom = false

    // Also, if you have double tap recognizer,
    // remember to remove it
    scrollView.removeGestureRecognizer(doubleTapGestureRecognizer)
}

func unlockScrollViewZooming() {
    scrollView.minimumZoomScale = 1.0
    scrollView.maximumZoomScale = 4.0
    scrollView.bounces = true
    scrollView.bouncesZoom = true

    // Also, if you have double tap recognizer,
    // remember to add it
    scrollView.removeGestureRecognizer(doubleTapGestureRecognizer)
}

Note that doubleTapGestureRecognizer should be an instance variable. It should be similar to:

private lazy var doubleTapGestureRecognizer: UITapGestureRecognizer = {
    let doubleTapGestureRecognizer = UITapGestureRecognizer(target: self, action: #selector(handleDoubleTap(_:)))
    doubleTapGestureRecognizer.numberOfTapsRequired = 2
    doubleTapGestureRecognizer.delegate = self

    return doubleTapGestureRecognizer
}()

@objc private func handleDoubleTap(_ recognizer: UITapGestureRecognizer) {
    //scrollView.setZoomScale((scrollView.zoomScale > scrollView.minimumZoomScale) ? scrollView.minimumZoomScale : scrollView.maximumZoomScale, animated: true)

    if scrollView.zoomScale > scrollView.minimumZoomScale {
        scrollView.setZoomScale(scrollView.minimumZoomScale, animated: true)
    } else {
        let touchLocation = recognizer.location(in: recognizer.view)
        scrollView.zoom(to: CGRect(origin: touchLocation, size: CGSize(width: 22.0, height: 20.0)), animated: true)
    }
}
3
  • there is an error in your lockScrollViewZomming() method. Should be maximumZoomScale, and not minimum twice.
    – malaba
    Aug 6, 2018 at 10:56
  • Thank you @malaba please feel free to edit the answer :)
    – Ahmad F
    Aug 6, 2018 at 11:47
  • Can't! My modification is only 2 char and the editor required a minimum of 6...
    – malaba
    Sep 14, 2018 at 14:30
1

You need to turn off Two Fingers and Double Tap of scroll view

self.scrollView.delegate = self

And

extension YourViewController: UIScrollViewDelegate {
   func scrollViewWillBeginZooming(_ scrollView: UIScrollView, with view: UIView?) {
       scrollView.pinchGestureRecognizer?.isEnabled = false
   }

   func viewForZooming(in scrollView: UIScrollView) -> UIView? {
       return nil
   }
}
0

If you want to disable only zooming with pinch gesture, below code does the trick.

scrollView.pinchGestureRecognizer?.requireGestureRecognizerToFail(scrollView.panGestureRecognizer)

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