66

I have a segmented control where the user can select how to order a list. Works fine.

However, I would like that when an already selected segment is tapped, the order gets inverted. I have all the code in place, but I don't know how to register the taps on those segments. It seems the only control event you can use is UIControlEventValueChanged, but that isn't working (since the selected segment isn't actually changing).

Is there a solution for this? And if so, what is it?

Thanks in advance!

20 Answers 20

51

You can subclass UISegmentedControl, and then override setSelectedSegmentIndex:

- (void) setSelectedSegmentIndex:(NSInteger)toValue {
    if (self.selectedSegmentIndex == toValue) {
        [super setSelectedSegmentIndex:UISegmentedControlNoSegment];
    } else {
        [super setSelectedSegmentIndex:toValue];        
    }
}

If using IB, make sure you set the class of your UISegmentedControl to your subclass.

Now you can listen for the same UIControlEventValueChanged as you would normally, except if the user deselected the segment, you will see a selectedSegmentIndex equal to UISegmentedControlNoSegment:

-(IBAction) valueChanged: (id) sender {
    UISegmentedControl *segmentedControl = (UISegmentedControl*) sender;
    switch ([segmentedControl selectedSegmentIndex]) {
        case 0:
            // do something
            break;
        case 1:
            // do something
            break;
        case UISegmentedControlNoSegment:
            // do something
            break;
        default:
            NSLog(@"No option for: %d", [segmentedControl selectedSegmentIndex]);
    }
}
1
  • for iOS5.1 this works absolutely perfect along with solution from Bob De Graaf Sep 7, 2012 at 17:53
32

I think it is even a little better if you use -(void)touchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event---as this is the behaviour of UISegmentedControl. Further, it seems you don't need to overload the -(void)setSelectedSegmentIndex:(NSInteger)toValue

-(void)touchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {    
    NSInteger current = self.selectedSegmentIndex;
    [super touchesBegan:touches withEvent:event];
    if (current == self.selectedSegmentIndex) 
        [self sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
}
2
  • 1
    You might want to add [self setSelectedSegmentIndex:UISegmentedControlNoSegment]; at the beginning of the if statement (which really should use curly braces, IMHO)
    – Warpspace
    Jan 15, 2013 at 4:41
  • 3
    See this answer for an iOS 7 updated version: stackoverflow.com/a/17652998/292145
    – Klaas
    Sep 24, 2013 at 15:18
20

Wanted this myself. Took Julian's solution (thanks!) and modified slightly.

The following UISegmentedControl subclass simply triggers the UIControlEventValueChanged event even when the value didn't change, which obviously reads a bit weird, but works fine in my case and keeps things simple.

AKSegmentedControl.h

#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>

@interface AKSegmentedControl : UISegmentedControl {
}

@end

AKSegmentedControl.m

#import "AKSegmentedControl.h"

@implementation AKSegmentedControl

- (void)setSelectedSegmentIndex:(NSInteger)toValue {
  // Trigger UIControlEventValueChanged even when re-tapping the selected segment.
  if (toValue==self.selectedSegmentIndex) {
    [self sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
  }
  [super setSelectedSegmentIndex:toValue];        
}

@end
3
  • This seems to be the trick I was looking for - I have a segmented control with one segment that I need to trigger a modal view to appear whenever it's touched. Thanks.
    – petert
    Apr 28, 2010 at 13:31
  • For a single segmented control (as petert mentioned), also see gist.github.com/401670.
    – Henrik N
    May 16, 2010 at 8:39
  • 2
    This doesn't work for me in iOS 6.1. That method is call once, but when responding to touches it is not call. Look like Apple is bypassing its own setters and getters. May 7, 2013 at 19:26
12

This works on both iOS 4 and 5:

-(void) touchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{
  int oldValue = self.selectedSegmentIndex;
  [super touchesBegan:touches withEvent:event];
  if ( oldValue == self.selectedSegmentIndex )
    [self sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
}
3
  • How does this work? Why do you call [super touchesBegan:touches withEvent:event]? What happens in the super version?
    – ladookie
    Jan 3, 2012 at 3:18
  • 1
    It sends a UIControlEventValueChanged message when the active segment has been tapped on. Calling [super touchesBegan:touches withEvent:event] executes the normal system-provided event handling code -- it will change the value if the user taps on a non-active segment and send that event itself in that case.
    – EricS
    Jan 6, 2012 at 4:48
  • I like this. But to actually make the selection become deselected, in the main part of my code (not in the subclass here), that's where i set it to be deselected, inside of the Change IBAction: - (IBAction)addSSslotSelectorChange:(id)sender { if(slotSelector.selectedSegmentIndex == [scratch_format.slot intValue]) { slotSelector.selectedSegmentIndex = -1; } scratch_format.slot = [NSNumber numberWithInt:slotSelector.selectedSegmentIndex]; NSLog(@"Slot changed to: %i",slotSelector.selectedSegmentIndex); }
    – CommaToast
    Mar 6, 2012 at 1:42
11

The current solution presented still does not work, because setSelectedSegmentIndex is never called unless really a new segment is tapped. At least in my case this never worked, I do use iOS5 though, perhaps this solution did work in iOS4. Anyway, this is my solution. It needs one extra subclass method, which is the following:

-(void)touchesEnded:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{    
    [self setSelectedSegmentIndex:self.selectedSegmentIndex];
    [super touchesEnded:touches withEvent:event];
}

Good luck!

4
  • 1
    Thanks. This does work in iOS 5, while the other method worked in iOS 3 and 4.
    – EricS
    Dec 10, 2011 at 20:50
  • to make it work in iOS 5, you need add [self sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
    – Chris Chen
    Jun 18, 2012 at 12:10
  • for me touchesBegan worked. Which doesn't produce entirely the toggle behavior, but I custom handled in my code. Thanks Sep 7, 2012 at 16:53
  • I don't think the line [self setSelectedSegmentIndex:self.selectedSegmentIndex]; is needed. The [super ...] call makes that line unnecessary.
    – TyR
    Dec 1, 2020 at 22:59
9

This was a pretty old question so I thought I'd add the rather simple solution I used when I ran into this in an iOS 5+ app.

All I did was drag a Tap Gesture Recognizer onto the UISegmentedControl in my .xib file. Check the connections for your new gesture recognizer to make sure the segmented control is the only gestureRecognizer outlet and then just wire up it's action to the method you want to fire in your controller.

This method should fire any time you touch the segmented control, so just check the selected index with perhaps an instance variable to see if the user touched the already selected segment.

@implementation MyViewController

@synthesize selectedSegment;
@synthesize segmentedControl;

// connected to Tap Gesture Recognizer's action
- (IBAction)segmentedControlTouched:(id)sender
{
    NSLog(@"Segmented Control Touched");
    if (selectedSegment == [segmentedControl selectedSegmentIndex]) {
        // Do some cool stuff
    }

    selectedSegment = [segmentedControl selectedSegmentIndex];

}

@end
3
  • doesnt work for ios5.1 since the gesture recognizer does not want to acceot the segmentcontrol when dragged over it
    – user387184
    Jul 20, 2012 at 7:37
  • It still works. Even thought it doesn't let you drag the gesture recognizer over the segmented control, you can put it on the top level of your xib (I put it above the view in the list of objects) and in the connections tab connect the gesture to the segmented control there.
    – Steve E
    Jul 21, 2012 at 8:50
  • 1
    This worked great for me! @user387184 you have to drag it into your xib, then right click it and drag from "New referencing outlet collection" to the segmented control and click the pop up "gestureRecognizer".
    – malhal
    Feb 1, 2013 at 6:24
8

On iOS8 every answer here seem to either not work or trigger change twice. I came up with very simple solution - so I'd like to share it.

In subclass I only have:

- (void)touchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
    [super touchesBegan:touches withEvent:event];
    [self setSelectedSegmentIndex:UISegmentedControlNoSegment];
}

What it does is to reset selected segment to -1 before changing segmented control segment. It will happen in touchesEnded method.

5
  • Excellent, best answer.
    – mojuba
    May 11, 2016 at 11:37
  • Working for me. :)
    – sanjeet
    Jul 28, 2016 at 7:54
  • Works for me on iOS10.
    – Alper
    Jan 6, 2017 at 13:31
  • And now it doesn't anymore… Very curious behaviour.
    – Alper
    Jan 6, 2017 at 13:36
  • 1
    Clever hack! Works fine in iOS 13.x. Apr 29, 2020 at 12:37
8

Swift 5

class ReselectableSegmentedControl: UISegmentedControl {
    // Captures existing selected segment on touchesBegan.
    var oldValue: Int!

    override func touchesBegan(_ touches: Set<UITouch>, with event: UIEvent?) {
        self.oldValue = self.selectedSegmentIndex
        super.touchesBegan(touches, with: event)
    }

    override func touchesEnded(_ touches: Set<UITouch>, with event: UIEvent?) {
        super.touchesEnded(touches, with: event)

        if self.oldValue == self.selectedSegmentIndex {
            self.sendActions(for: .valueChanged)
        }
    }
}

From here

6

This works:

- (void)touchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{
    int oldValue = self.selectedSegmentIndex;
    [super touchesBegan:touches withEvent:event];
    if (oldValue == self.selectedSegmentIndex)
    {
        [super setSelectedSegmentIndex:UISegmentedControlNoSegment];
        [self sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
    }
}
4

In Swift 3 I could imagine at least 2 solutions as follows. For a special case I posted also a third solution, where the selected segment works as toggle button.

Solution 1:

Hint: This solution only works on momentary controlSegments! If you need a solution for stationary controls, choose Solution 2

The idea is to register a second event that fires up on touch-up-inside:

// this solution works only for momentary segment control:
class Solution1ViewController : UIViewController {
    var current:Int = UISegmentedControlNoSegment
    @IBOutlet weak var mySegmentedControl: UISegmentedControl! {
        didSet {
            guard mySegmentedControl != nil else { return }

            self.mySegmentedControl!.addTarget(
                self,
                action:#selector(changeSelection(sender:)),
                for: .valueChanged)

            self.mySegmentedControl!.addTarget(
                self,
                action:#selector(changeSelection(sender:)),
                for: .touchUpInside)
        }
    }

    func changeSelection(sender: UISegmentedControl) {
        if current == sender.selectedSegmentIndex {
            // user hit the same button again!
            print("user hit the same button again!")
        }
        else {
            current = sender.selectedSegmentIndex
            // user selected a new index
             print("user selected a new index")
        }
    }
}

Solution 2: The other way is to override the touch functions in UISegmentedControl and to fire the valueChanged even if the segment index has not changed. Therefore you could override the UISegmentedControl as follows:

// override UISegmentControl to fire event on second hit:
class Solution2SegmentControl : UISegmentedControl
{
    private var current:Int = UISegmentedControlNoSegment
    override func touchesBegan(_ touches: Set<UITouch>, with event: UIEvent?) {
        current = self.selectedSegmentIndex
        super.touchesBegan(touches, with: event)
    }
    override func touchesEnded(_ touches: Set<UITouch>, with event: UIEvent?) {
        super.touchesEnded(touches, with: event)
        if current == self.selectedSegmentIndex {
            self.sendActions(for: .valueChanged)
        }
    }
}

// solution2 works with stationary (default) segment controls
class Solution2ViewController : UIViewController {
    var current:Int = UISegmentedControlNoSegment

    @IBOutlet weak var mySegmentedControl: UISegmentedControl! {
        didSet {
            guard mySegmentedControl != nil else { return }

            self.mySegmentedControl!.addTarget(
                self,
                action:#selector(changeSelection(sender:)),
                for: .valueChanged)
        }
    }

    func changeSelection(sender: UISegmentedControl) {
        if current == sender.selectedSegmentIndex {
            // user hit the same button again!
            print("user hit the same button again!")
        }
        else {
            current = sender.selectedSegmentIndex
            // user selected a new index
            print("user selected a new index")
        }
    }
}

Solution 3: If your approach was to have the selected segment be a toggle button than Solution 2 could be changed to clean up the code like this:

class MyToggleSegmentControl : UISegmentedControl {
    /// you could enable or disable the toggle behaviour here
    var shouldToggle:Bool = true

    private var current:Int = UISegmentedControlNoSegment
    override func touchesBegan(_ touches: Set<UITouch>, with event: UIEvent?) {
        current = self.selectedSegmentIndex
        super.touchesBegan(touches, with: event)
    }
    override func touchesEnded(_ touches: Set<UITouch>, with event: UIEvent?) {
        super.touchesEnded(touches, with: event)
        if shouldToggle, current == self.selectedSegmentIndex {
            self.selectedSegmentIndex = UISegmentedControlNoSegment
        }
    }
}

Now we could clean up the changeSelection function as follows:

func changeSelection(sender: UISegmentedControl) {
    switch sender.selectedSegmentIndex {
    case UISegmentedControlNoSegment:
        print("none")
    default:
        print("selected: \(sender.selectedSegmentIndex)")
    }
}
5
  • In solution 1, what is segmentedValues ?
    – Jonny
    Apr 27, 2017 at 7:42
  • If you meant mySegmentedControl by that, solution 1 does not work for me.
    – Jonny
    Apr 27, 2017 at 7:46
  • segmentedValues actually should be mySegmentedControl - I fixed that, thanks for the hint
    – hhamm
    May 3, 2017 at 16:24
  • Also the Solution1 only works on momentary segmentControl.
    – hhamm
    May 3, 2017 at 16:36
  • neither solution1 nor solution2 is working for me in Xcode 9, swift 4
    – lozflan
    Jun 7, 2018 at 0:01
1

The first idea I had was wire up the Touch Up Inside or Touch Down actions to your sort method, but this doesn't seem to work.

The second idea is more of a work around, set the Momentary property on the segmented control. This will then fire a Value Did Change action every time it is tapped.

3
  • You'd get notified of all touches, but a momentary control doesn't show any segment as currently selected, which might be kind of confusing. Oct 25, 2009 at 15:01
  • Your first idea was mine as well... And as Sixten points out, your second idea is not really ideal. Oct 25, 2009 at 15:54
  • 1
    You might want to ask another question on why UISegmentedControl doesn't receive Touch Up Inside actions. Oct 25, 2009 at 16:26
1

Big help! What I want to do is have the option of one or no buttons set - and when a button is set, a second tap unsets it. This is my modification:

- (void)setSelectedSegmentIndex:(NSInteger)toValue
{
  // Trigger UIControlEventValueChanged even when re-tapping the selected segment.
  if (toValue==self.selectedSegmentIndex) {
    [super setSelectedSegmentIndex:UISegmentedControlNoSegment]; // notify first
    [self sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged]; // then unset
  } else {
    [super setSelectedSegmentIndex:toValue]; 
  }
}

Notify first lets you read the control to find the current setting before it's reset.

2
  • It might be related, but this is another question.
    – petert
    Apr 28, 2010 at 9:21
  • UPDATE - sorry, misread the start of the answer. Would've been nice if source code was formatted, by indenting each line by 4 spaces.
    – petert
    Apr 28, 2010 at 9:29
1

Here is my solution. The most elegant I think if you want the ValueChanged event to fire on every touches...

.h

@interface UISegmentedControlAllChanges : UISegmentedControl
@end

.m

@implementation UISegmentedControlAllChanges

-(void)touchesEnded:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{    
    [self sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
    [super touchesEnded:touches withEvent:event];
}

@end
1

Based on Bob de Graaf's answer:

-(void)touchesEnded:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{
    [self sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventAllTouchEvents];
    [super touchesEnded:touches withEvent:event];
}

Note the use of UIControlEventAllTouchEvents instead of UIControlEventValueChanged.

Also there's no need to call -(void)setSelectedSegmentIndex:.

1

Below the piece of code that did work for me. Repeated tap on the same segment will deselect it.

@implementation WUUnselectableSegmentedControl
{
    NSUInteger _selectedIndexBeforeTouches;
}

- (void)touchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{
    _selectedIndexBeforeTouches = self.selectedSegmentIndex;
    [super touchesBegan:touches withEvent:event];
}

-(void)touchesEnded:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{
    [super touchesEnded:touches withEvent:event];

    if (_selectedIndexBeforeTouches == self.selectedSegmentIndex)
    {
        // Selection didn't change after touch - deselect
        self.selectedSegmentIndex = UISegmentedControlNoSegment;
        [self sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
    }
}

@end
1

iOS 9 solution. Override UISegmentedControl with such class:

@interface SegmentedControl()

@property (nonatomic) NSInteger previousCurrent;

@end

@implementation SegmentedControl

- (void)touchesBegan:(NSSet<UITouch *> *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
    self.previousCurrent = self.selectedSegmentIndex;
    [super touchesBegan:touches withEvent:event];
}

- (void)touchesEnded:(NSSet<UITouch *> *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
    [super touchesEnded:touches withEvent:event];

    if (self.selectedSegmentIndex == self.previousCurrent) {
        [self sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
    }

    self.previousCurrent = NSNotFound;
}

@end
1

Seems like a fun question to answer. This scheme expands upon Steve E's and yershuachu's solutions. This version uses a UITapGestureRecognizer to capture all touches and which sets the selectedSegmentIndex to -1; but it also passes on all touches to the UISegmentedControl so it can handle any normal touches. No subclassing is required.

UISegmentedControl *mySegControl;

- (void)viewDidLoad
{
    [super viewDidLoad];

    [mySegControl addTarget:self action:@selector(segmentAction:)
           forControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
    // allow the a seg button tap to be seen even if already selected
    UITapGestureRecognizer *tapGesture = [[UITapGestureRecognizer alloc]
                                          initWithTarget:self action:@selector(unitsSegTap:)];
    tapGesture.cancelsTouchesInView = NO; // pass touches through for normal taps
    [mySegControl addGestureRecognizer:tapGesture];

    // continue setup ...
}

- (void)segTap:(UITapGestureRecognizer *)sender
{
    mySegControl.selectedSegmentIndex = -1;
}

// called for UIControlEventValueChanged
- (void)segmentAction:(UISegmentedControl *)sender
{
    NSInteger index = sender.selectedSegmentIndex;
    NSLog(@"unitsSegmentAction %d",(int)index);
    // process the segment
}
1
  • 1
    Haha, almost 10 years later. Nice! Thanks for answering. Jan 17, 2019 at 8:14
0

I'm using KVO to invert already selected segment for iOS8.

#import "QCSegmentedControl.h"

static void *QCSegmentedControlContext = &QCSegmentedControlContext;

@implementation QCSegmentedControl

- (id)initWithCoder:(NSCoder *)aDecoder {
    self = [super initWithCoder:aDecoder];
    if (self) {
        [self registerKVO];
    }

    return self;
}

- (void)dealloc {
    [self removeObserver:self forKeyPath:@"selectedSegmentIndex"];
}

#pragma mark -

- (void)registerKVO {
    [self addObserver:self
           forKeyPath:@"selectedSegmentIndex"
              options:(NSKeyValueObservingOptionNew | NSKeyValueObservingOptionOld)
              context:QCSegmentedControlContext];
}

- (void)observeValueForKeyPath:(NSString *)keyPath
                      ofObject:(id)object
                        change:(NSDictionary *)change
                       context:(void *)context {
    if (context == QCSegmentedControlContext) {
        NSNumber *new = change[NSKeyValueChangeNewKey];
        NSNumber *old = change[NSKeyValueChangeOldKey];
        if (new.integerValue == old.integerValue) {
            self.selectedSegmentIndex = UISegmentedControlNoSegment;
        }
    }
}

@end
0

The selected answer's solution did not work for me as of current iOS v8.x. But @Andy offer a solution and I will complete:

Subclass the UISegmentedControl, and overwrite touchesEnded method in the subclass:

-(void) touchesEnded:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event
{
    [self sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventAllTouchEvents];
    [super touchesEnded:touches withEvent:event];
}

In the class where you intend to use the UISegmentedControl, create an iVar currentSelectedSegIndex. Add the UIControlEventAllTouchEvents beside your UIControlEventValueChanged action methods:

NSInteger currentSelectedSegIndex;

[aSegmentedController addTarget:self action:@selector(aSegmentedControllerSelection:) forControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
[aSegmentedController addTarget:self action:@selector(aSegmentedControllerAllTouchEvent:) forControlEvents:UIControlEventAllTouchEvents];

Implement the two action methods:

-(void)aSegmentedControllerAllTouchEvent:(MyUISegmentedControl *)seg
{
    seg.selectedSegmentIndex = UISegmentedControlNoSegment;
}
-(void)aSegmentedControllerSelection:(MyUISegmentedControl *)seg
{
    if (currentSelectedSegIndex == seg.selectedSegmentIndex)
    {
        seg.selectedSegmentIndex = UISegmentedControlNoSegment;
        currentSelectedSegIndex = NSIntegerMax;
        NSLog(@"%s Deselected.", __PRETTY_FUNCTION__);
        // do your stuff if deselected
        return;
    }
    NSLog(@"%s Selected index:%u", __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, seg.selectedSegmentIndex);
    currentSelectedSegIndex = seg.selectedSegmentIndex;
    //do your stuff if selected index
}
0

Because the UISegmentedControl is in charge of setting the segment, it should only reset the state. I modify a little the suggestions of other guys for swift 5:

//MARK: Custom segmentedControl
///  Every element works like a flipflop  [see](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17652773/how-to-deselect-a-segment-in-segmented-control-button-permanently-till-its-click)
@IBDesignable class GRSegmentedControl: UISegmentedControl {
  private let url = Bundle.main.url(forResource: "PlopChoiceCntrl", withExtension: "aiff")!
  private var soundID:SystemSoundID = 0

  override init(items: [Any]?) {
    AudioServicesCreateSystemSoundID(url as CFURL, &soundID)
    super.init(items: items)
  }

  required init?(coder: NSCoder) {
    AudioServicesCreateSystemSoundID(url as CFURL, &soundID)
    super.init(coder: coder)
  }

  override func touchesEnded(_ touches: Set<UITouch>, with event: UIEvent?) {
    AudioServicesPlaySystemSound(soundID)
    let previousSelectedSegmentIndex = self.selectedSegmentIndex
    super.touchesEnded(touches, with: event)
    if previousSelectedSegmentIndex == self.selectedSegmentIndex {
      if let touch = touches.first{
        let touchLocation = touch.location(in: self)
        if bounds.contains(touchLocation) {
          self.selectedSegmentIndex = UISegmentedControl.noSegment
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

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