how can I use the methods textFieldDidBeginEditing
and textFieldDidEndEditing
with the default TextField struct by apple.
3 Answers
TextField
has onEditingChanged
and onCommit
callbacks.
For example:
@State var text = ""
@State var text2 = "default"
var body: some View {
VStack {
TextField($text, placeholder: nil, onEditingChanged: { (changed) in
self.text2 = "Editing Changed"
}) {
self.text2 = "Editing Commited"
}
Text(text2)
}
}
The code in onEditingChanged
is only called when the user selects the textField
, and onCommit
is only called when return, done, etc. is tapped.
Edit: When the user changes from one TextField
to another, the previously selected TextField
's onEditingChanged
is called once, with changed
(the parameter) equaling false
, and the just-selected TextField
's onEditingChanged
is also called, but with the parameter equaling true
. The onCommit
callback is not called for the previously selected TextField
.
Edit 2:
Adding an example for if you want to call a function committed()
when a user taps return or changes TextField
, and changed()
when the user taps the TextField
:
@State var text = ""
var body: some View {
VStack {
TextField($text, placeholder: nil, onEditingChanged: { (changed) in
if changed {
self.changed()
} else {
self.committed()
}
}) {
self.committed()
}
}
}
-
-
It does. I just tested it. I'll update my answer to explain what happens when you switch
TextField
s.– RPatel99Jun 11, 2019 at 21:34 -
no. it doesn't. I have tested it now. do you have a sample project? Jun 11, 2019 at 21:39
-
3@jsbeginnerNodeJS check the answer now.
onCommit
is not called on the previousTextField
when they switch, butonEditingChanged
is called, with its parameter equalingfalse
.– RPatel99Jun 11, 2019 at 21:40 -
1Is there a way to actually trigger the commit? (I need this so it runs the number formatter correctly) Dec 20, 2019 at 21:05
SwiftUI 3 (iOS 15+)
Since TextField.init(_text:onEditingChanged:) is scheduled for deprecation in a future version it may be best to use @FocusState. This method also has the added benefit of knowing when the TextField is no longer the "first responder" which .onChange(of:)
and .onSubmit(of:)
alone will not do.
@State private var text = ""
@FocusState private var isTextFieldFocused: Bool
var body: some View {
TextField("Text Field", text: $text)
.focused($isTextFieldFocused)
.onChange(of: isTextFieldFocused) { isFocused in
if isFocused {
// began editing...
} else {
// ended editing...
}
}
}
-
@FocusState
does not react to input, so it does not make a good substitute..onChange(of:)
is a much more appropriated substitute..onSubmit(of:)
is the substitute for.onCommit:
.– YrbMar 9, 2022 at 19:49 -
@Yrb I don't see the need to react to input here. The question is asking how to detect when the text field begins and ends edits which exactly correlates with it focus state.– David B.Mar 11, 2022 at 18:45
SwiftUI 2
ios15 and above
The syntax has changed for swiftui2
a modifier onChange
is triggered when a property value has changed and onSubmit
is triggered when form is submitted ie you press enter
TextField("search", text: $searchQuery)
.onChange(of: searchQuery){ newValue in
print("textChanged")
}
.onSubmit {
print("textSubmitted")
}