I have a UITableViewCell
which is linked to an object and I need to tell if the cell is visible. From the research I've done, this means I need to somehow access the UITableView
that contains it (from there, there are several ways to check if it's visible). So I'm wondering if UITableViewCell
has a pointer to the UITableView
, or if there was any other way to get a pointer from the cell?
21 Answers
To avoid checking the iOS version, iteratively walk up the superviews from the cell's view until a UITableView is found:
Objective-C
id view = [cellInstance superview];
while (view && [view isKindOfClass:[UITableView class]] == NO) {
view = [view superview];
}
UITableView *tableView = (UITableView *)view;
Swift
var view = cellInstance.superview
while (view != nil && (view as? UITableView) == nil) {
view = view?.superview
}
if let tableView = view as? UITableView {
tableView.beginUpdates()
tableView.endUpdates()
}
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1Thanks. It would appear that this has changed once again in iOS 8 and this takes care of all versions nicely. Oct 12, 2014 at 19:22
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2I would recommend adding a weak reference to the tableview to the cell to avoid compatibility issues in future updates.– CennyJun 18, 2015 at 17:20
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1Rather a weak way. It won't work if view's hierarchy changes in future.– RomanNNov 26, 2015 at 15:33
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2It would be better to simply create a weak property that actually holds a pointer to the tableview. In the subclass
@property (weak, nonatomic) UITableView *tableView;
and intableView:cellForRowAtIndexPath:
just setcell.tableView = tableView;
. Nov 22, 2016 at 16:34 -
Current experience is that after dequeuing a cell, a tableview is not appearing as a superview of the cell right away - if I scroll the cell out of view and back in again I do find a table view as a superview (recursive search as described in other answers). Autolayout and possibly other factors are likely reasons.– JonnyAug 22, 2018 at 2:42
In iOS7 beta 5 UITableViewWrapperView
is the superview of a UITableViewCell
. Also UITableView
is superview of a UITableViewWrapperView
.
So for iOS 7 the solution is
UITableView *tableView = (UITableView *)cell.superview.superview;
So for iOSes up to iOS 6 the solution is
UITableView *tableView = (UITableView *)cell.superview;
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5Oh man, this is a brutal API change. What's apple's best practice for branching if you support both 6 and 7? Sep 11, 2013 at 7:23
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@RyanRomanchuk Here is one good suggestion: devforums.apple.com/message/865550#865550 -- create a weak pointer to your related tableView when the cell is created. Alternately, create a
UITableViewCell
category with a new method,relatedTableView
which does a check for an iOS version and returns the appropriate superView.– memmonsSep 14, 2013 at 20:48 -
3Write a recursive category on UIView for this. You don't need to check the version; just call superview until you find a table view cell or the top of the view stack. This is what I used in iOS 6, and it worked without modification in iOS 7. And should work sitll in iOS 8. Oct 15, 2013 at 19:16
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Swift 5 extension
Recursively
extension UIView {
func parentView<T: UIView>(of type: T.Type) -> T? {
guard let view = superview else {
return nil
}
return (view as? T) ?? view.parentView(of: T.self)
}
}
extension UITableViewCell {
var tableView: UITableView? {
return parentView(of: UITableView.self)
}
}
Using loop
extension UITableViewCell {
var tableView: UITableView? {
var view = superview
while let v = view, v.isKind(of: UITableView.self) == false {
view = v.superview
}
return view as? UITableView
}
}
-
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2@thibautnoah There is a
view != nil
check before unwrapping. Updated to cleaner code though Jul 31, 2019 at 14:25
Before iOS7, the cell's superview was the UITableView
that contained it. As of iOS7 GM (so presumably will be in the public release as well) the cell's superview is a UITableViewWrapperView
with its superview being the UITableView
. There are two solutions to the problem.
Solution #1: Create a UITableViewCell
category
@implementation UITableViewCell (RelatedTable)
- (UITableView *)relatedTable
{
if ([self.superview isKindOfClass:[UITableView class]])
return (UITableView *)self.superview;
else if ([self.superview.superview isKindOfClass:[UITableView class]])
return (UITableView *)self.superview.superview;
else
{
NSAssert(NO, @"UITableView shall always be found.");
return nil;
}
}
@end
This is a good drop-in replacement to using cell.superview
, makes it easy to refactor your existing code -- just search and replace with [cell relatedTable]
, and throw in an assert to ensure that if the view hierarchy changes or reverts in the future it will show up immediately in your tests.
Solution #2: Add a Weak UITableView
reference to UITableViewCell
@interface SOUITableViewCell
@property (weak, nonatomic) UITableView *tableView;
@end
This is a much better design, though it will require a bit more code refactoring to use in existing projects. In your tableView:cellForRowAtIndexPath
use SOUITableViewCell as your cell class or make sure your custom cell class is subclassed from SOUITableViewCell
and assign the tableView to the cell's tableView property. Inside the cell you can then refer to the containing tableview using self.tableView
.
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I disagree that solution 2 is a better design. It has more points of failure and requires disciplined manual intervention. The first solution is actually quite reliable, though I would implement it as @idris suggested in his answer for a bit more futureproofing.– devios1Apr 22, 2014 at 23:02
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1Test
[self.superview.superview isKindOfClass:[UITableView class]]
should be the first, 'cause the iOS 7 is more and more. Jun 19, 2014 at 8:14
If it is visible then it has a superview. And ... surprise ... the superview is an UITableView object.
However, having a superview is no guarantee for being on screen. But UITableView provides methods to determine which cells are visible.
And no, there is no dedicated reference from a cell to a table. But when you subclass UITableViewCell you may introduce one and set it upon creation. (I did that myself a lot before I thought of the subview hierarchy.)
Update for iOS7: Apple has changed the subview hierarchy here. As usual when working with things that are not detailled documented, there is always a risk that things change. It is far saver to "crawl up" the view hierarchy until a UITableView object is eventually found.
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14This is no longer true in iOS7, In iOS7 beta5 UITableViewWrapperView is the superview of a UITableViewCell... causing me issues right now– GabeAug 6, 2013 at 20:54
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Thanks for the comment. I'll have to check some of my code then. Aug 7, 2013 at 11:30
Swift 2.2 solution.
An extension for UIView that recursively searches for a view with a specific type.
import UIKit
extension UIView {
func lookForSuperviewOfType<T: UIView>(type: T.Type) -> T? {
guard let view = self.superview as? T else {
return self.superview?.lookForSuperviewOfType(type)
}
return view
}
}
or more compact (thanks to kabiroberai):
import UIKit
extension UIView {
func lookForSuperviewOfType<T: UIView>(type: T.Type) -> T? {
return superview as? T ?? superview?.superviewOfType(type)
}
}
In your cell you just call it:
let tableView = self.lookForSuperviewOfType(UITableView)
// Here we go
Mind that UITableViewCell is added on the UITableView only after cellForRowAtIndexPath execution.
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You can compact the entire
lookForSuperviewOfType:
method body into one line, making it even swift-ey:return superview as? T ?? superview?.superviewOfType(type)
Aug 24, 2016 at 16:24 -
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The name used by the recursive call needs to match. So this needs to read: ... ?? superview?.lookForSuperviewOfType(type)– robertOct 10, 2016 at 20:19
Whatever you may end up managing to do by calling super view or via the responder chain is going to be very fragile. The best way to do this, if the cells wants to know something, is to pass an object to the cell that responds to some method that answers the question the cell wants to ask, and have the controller implement the logic of determining what to answer (from your question I guess the cell wants to know if something is visible or not).
Create a delegate protocol in the cell, set the delegate of the cell the tableViewController and move all the ui "controlling" logic in the tableViewCotroller.
The table view cells should be dum view that will only display information.
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Maybe even better through delegates. i'm temporarily using a passed reference to the table since the parent gave me problems. Oct 24, 2013 at 18:02
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1
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This should be the accepted answer, people see this question, see the 150+ upvote answer and they think is fine to get the tableView from the cell and even more maybe keep a strong reference to it unfortunately. Feb 13, 2019 at 13:18
I created a category on UITableViewCell to get its parent tableView:
@implementation UITableViewCell (ParentTableView)
- (UITableView *)parentTableView {
UITableView *tableView = nil;
UIView *view = self;
while(view != nil) {
if([view isKindOfClass:[UITableView class]]) {
tableView = (UITableView *)view;
break;
}
view = [view superview];
}
return tableView;
}
@end
Best,
Here is the Swift version based on above answers. I have generalized into ExtendedCell
for later usage.
import Foundation
import UIKit
class ExtendedCell: UITableViewCell {
weak var _tableView: UITableView!
func rowIndex() -> Int {
if _tableView == nil {
_tableView = tableView()
}
return _tableView.indexPathForSelectedRow!.row
}
func tableView() -> UITableView! {
if _tableView != nil {
return _tableView
}
var view = self.superview
while view != nil && !(view?.isKindOfClass(UITableView))! {
view = view?.superview
}
self._tableView = view as! UITableView
return _tableView
}
}
Hope this help :)
I based this solution on Gabe's suggestion that UITableViewWrapperView
object is the superview of UITableViewCell
object in iOS7 beta5 .
Subclass UITableviewCell
:
- (UITableView *)superTableView
{
return (UITableView *)[self findTableView:self];
}
- (UIView *)findTableView:(UIView *)view
{
if (view.superview && [view.superview isKindOfClass:[UITableView class]]) {
return view.superview;
}
return [self findTableView:view.superview];
}
I Borrowed and modified a little bit from the above answer and come up with the following snippet.
- (id)recursivelyFindSuperViewWithClass:(Class)clazz fromView:(id)containedView {
id containingView = [containedView superview];
while (containingView && ![containingView isKindOfClass:[clazz class]]) {
containingView = [containingView superview];
}
return containingView;
}
Passing in class offers the flexibility for traversing and getting views other than UITableView in some other occasions.
My solution to this problem is somewhat similar to other solutions, but uses an elegant for-loop and is short. It should also be future-proof:
- (UITableView *)tableView
{
UIView *view;
for (view = self.superview; ![view isKindOfClass:UITableView.class]; view = view.superview);
return (UITableView *)view;
}
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1This will loop forever if the cell is not yet in the table view when called. To fix, add a check for nil:
for (view = self.superview; view && ![view isKindOfClass:UITableView.class]; view = view.superview);
Jan 20, 2017 at 8:45
UITableView *tv = (UITableView *) self.superview.superview;
BuyListController *vc = (BuyListController *) tv.dataSource;
Instead of superview, try using ["UItableViewvariable" visibleCells].
I used that in a foreach loops to loop through the cells that the app saw and it worked.
for (UITableView *v in [orderItemTableView visibleCells])//visibleCell is the fix.
{
@try{
[orderItemTableView reloadData];
if ([v isKindOfClass:[UIView class]]) {
ReviewOrderTableViewCell *cell = (ReviewOrderTableViewCell *)v;
if (([[cell deleteRecord] intValue] == 1) || ([[[cell editQuantityText] text] intValue] == 0))
//code here
}
}
}
Works like a charm.
Minimally tested but this non-generic Swift 3 example seems to work:
extension UITableViewCell {
func tableView() -> UITableView? {
var currentView: UIView = self
while let superView = currentView.superview {
if superView is UITableView {
return (superView as! UITableView)
}
currentView = superView
}
return nil
}
}
this code `UITableView *tblView=[cell superview];
will give you an instance of the UItableview which contains the tabe view cell
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This will not work, as the immediate superview of a UITableViewCell is not a UITableView. As of iOS 7, the UITableViewCell superview is a UITableViewWrapperView. See the other answers in here for less fragile, more reliable approaches.– JaredHJun 22, 2014 at 22:01
I suggest you traverse the view hierarchy this way to find the parent UITableView:
- (UITableView *) findParentTableView:(UITableViewCell *) cell
{
UIView *view = cell;
while ( view && ![view isKindOfClass:[UITableView class]] )
{
#ifdef DEBUG
NSLog( @"%@", [[view class ] description] );
#endif
view = [view superview];
}
return ( (UITableView *) view );
}
Otherwise your code will break when Apple changes the view hierarchy again.
Another answer that also traverses the hierarchy is recursive.
UITableViewCell Internal View Hierarchy Change in iOS 7
Using iOS 6.1 SDK
<UITableViewCell>
| <UITableViewCellContentView>
| | <UILabel>
Using iOS 7 SDK
<UITableViewCell>
| <UITableViewCellScrollView>
| | <UIButton>
| | | <UIImageView>
| | <UITableViewCellContentView>
| | | <UILabel>
The new private UITableViewCellScrollView class is a subclass of UIScrollView and is what allows this interaction:
![enter image description here][1]
[1]: http://i.stack.imgur.com/C2uJa.gif
http://www.curiousfind.com/blog/646 Thank You
You can get it with one line of code.
UITableView *tableView = (UITableView *)[[cell superview] superview];
extension UIView {
func parentTableView() -> UITableView? {
var viewOrNil: UIView? = self
while let view = viewOrNil {
if let tableView = view as? UITableView {
return tableView
}
viewOrNil = view.superview
}
return nil
}
}
from @idris answer I wrote an expansion for UITableViewCell in Swift
extension UITableViewCell {
func relatedTableView() -> UITableView? {
var view = self.superview
while view != nil && !(view is UITableView) {
view = view?.superview
}
guard let tableView = view as? UITableView else { return nil }
return tableView
}
[cell superView]
maybe?