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I'm trying to achieve the same effect as Apple's Contacts app (left screenshot). The cancel button in UISearchBar is enabled even when the keyboard is dismissed. My app behaves differently (right screenshot). The cancel button automatically becomes disabled when the keyboard is dismissed. The user is forced to tap the cancel button one time to enable it and then another time to actually trigger the dismissal. This is not good user experience. How would I always keep the cancel button enabled like Apple's Contacts app?

Technical Details:

I'm not using UISearchDisplayController due to some design requirements. This is just a UISearchBar with my own custom search controller. The cancel button is shown using [self.searchBar showsCancelButton:YES animated:YES]. The keyboard is dismissed using [self.searchBar resignFirstResponder].

1

10 Answers 10

20

Call to [self.searchBar resignFirstResponder] will make the cancel button disabled. Hence, you should always update cancel button to enable after calling it.

Objective-C

[searchBar resignFirstResponder];
UIButton *cancelButton = (UIButton *)[searchBar valueForKey:@"cancelButton"];
[cancelButton setEnabled:YES];

Swift

searchBar.resignFirstResponder()
if let cancelButton = searchBar.value(forKey: "cancelButton") as? UIButton {
    cancelButton.isEnabled = true
}

In my experience, view.endEditing(true) is the problem. Because it's also called .resignFirstResponder if there's a UITextField inside the view, which is contained in UISearchBar.

https://developer.apple.com/reference/uikit/uiview/1619630-endediting

1
  • 1
    Put this in searchBarTextDidEndEditing and wrap it in DispatchQueue.main.async Sep 2, 2020 at 16:03
9

This is what worked for me to handle any dismissal such as searchBar.resignFirstResponder(), view.endEditing(false), interactive swipe to dismiss, presenting a view controller, etc.

extension ViewController: UISearchBarDelegate {

    func searchBarShouldEndEditing(_ searchBar: UISearchBar) -> Bool {
        //cancel button becomes disabled when search bar isn't first responder, force it back enabled
        DispatchQueue.main.async {
            if let cancelButton = searchBar.value(forKey: "cancelButton") as? UIButton {
                cancelButton.isEnabled = true
            }
        }
        return true
    }

}

Making sure to set searchBar.delegate = self.

1
  • I can confirm this solution for iOS 17.
    – Mick
    Sep 19, 2023 at 20:25
7

For Swift 4.0

if let cancelButton : UIButton = searchBar.value(forKey: "cancelButton") as? UIButton{
    cancelButton.isEnabled = true
}
2
  • As of iOS 13, this use of private API is caught and leads to a crash, unfortunately.
    – Jan Nash
    Oct 4, 2019 at 8:45
  • Hi @JanNash thanks for noticing the bug. I have updated my answer.
    – Muzahid
    Oct 20, 2019 at 0:56
5

You can use the runtime API to access the cancel button.

UIButton *btnCancel = [self.searchBar valueForKey:@"_cancelButton"];
[btnCancel setEnabled:YES];

As far as your question is concerned, there is no way you can enable the cancel button when the keyboard is dismissed, like there is no callback as such.

4

Since iOS 7 all the subview of UISearchBar are one level deeper. This should work:

for (UIView *subView in searchBar.subviews) {
    for (UIView *secondLevelSubview in subView.subviews) {
        if ([view isKindOfClass:[UIButton class]]) {
           [(UIButton *)view setEnabled:YES];
        }
}

Still hacky and can easily break in the next iOS version.

0
1

You could do this:

- (void)searchBarCancelButtonClicked:(UISearchBar *)searchBar {
    [self enableCancelButton];
}

- (void)enableCancelButton {
    for (UIView *view in _seachBar.subviews) {
        if ([view isKindOfClass:[UIButton class]]) {
            [(UIButton *)view setEnabled:YES];
        }
    }
}

BUT this is a pretty hackish method and I'm fairly certain it's generally frowned upon by Apple and could potentially lead to the app being rejected. As far as I know, there doesn't seem to be any other way to do what you're trying to do.

1

Here's a recursive solution that is working for me.

func enableButtons(_ view:UIView) { for subView in view.subviews { enableButtons(subView) } if let buttonView = view as? UIButton { buttonView.isEnabled = true } }

1

Try this simple solution, works perfect for me

extension UISearchBar {

    func enableCancelButton(in view: UIView) {

        view.subviews.forEach {
            enableCancelButton(in: $0)
        }

        if let cancelButton = view as? UIButton {
            cancelButton.isEnabled = true
            cancelButton.isUserInteractionEnabled = true
        }
    }
}

extension ViewController: UISearchBarDelegate {

    func searchBarTextDidEndEditing(_ searchBar: UISearchBar) {
        DispatchQueue.main.async {
            searchBar.enableCancelButton(in: searchBar)
        }
    }
}
2
  • Can you provide more information? References, context etc
    – mmoomocow
    Feb 24, 2020 at 11:11
  • While this code snippet may solve the question, including an explanation really helps to improve the quality of your post. Remember that you are answering the question for readers in the future, and those people might not know the reasons for your code suggestion. Please also try not to crowd your code with explanatory comments, this reduces the readability of both the code and the explanations! Feb 24, 2020 at 12:57
0

Implement the below searchBarShouldEndEditing delegate method in your code. Hope it will helpful.

(BOOL)searchBarShouldEndEditing:(UISearchBar *)searchBar 
{
    [[searchBar valueForKey:@"_cancelButton"] setEnabled:YES];
    return YES;
}
1
  • For me, the cancelButton is still enabled at that point, so it doesn't help enabling it here.
    – Jan Nash
    Aug 2, 2017 at 14:28
0

Here's a simple way:

searchBar.resignFirstResponder()
(searchBar.value(forKey: "_cancelButton") as? UIButton)?.isEnabled = true
0

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