144

I am using UICollectionView first time in my iPad application. I have set UICollectionView such that its size and cell size is same, means only once cell is displayed at a time.

Problem: Now when user scroll UICollectionView I need to know which cell is visible I have to update other UI elements on change. I didn't find any delegate method for this. How can I achieve this?

Code:

[self.mainImageCollection setTag:MAIN_IMAGE_COLLECTION_VIEW];
[self.mainImageCollection registerClass:[InspirationMainImageCollectionCell class] forCellWithReuseIdentifier:@"cellIdentifier"];
[self.mainImageFlowLayout setScrollDirection:UICollectionViewScrollDirectionHorizontal];
[self.mainImageFlowLayout setMinimumInteritemSpacing:0.0f];
[self.mainImageFlowLayout setMinimumLineSpacing:0.0f];
self.mainImageFlowLayout.minimumLineSpacing = 0;
[self.mainImageCollection setPagingEnabled:YES];
[self.mainImageCollection setShowsHorizontalScrollIndicator:NO];
[self.mainImageCollection setCollectionViewLayout:self.mainImageFlowLayout];

What I have tried:

As UICollectionView conforms to UIScrollView, I got when user scroll ends with UIScrollViewDelegate method

-(void)scrollViewDidEndDecelerating:(UIScrollView *)scrollView

But inside above function how can I get current visible cell index of UICollectionView ?

1
  • self.collectionViewFloors.indexPathsForVisibleItems
    – Aznix
    Oct 29, 2016 at 12:07

16 Answers 16

224

indexPathsForVisibleItems might work for most situations, but sometimes it returns an array with more than one index path and it can be tricky figuring out the one you want. In those situations, you can do something like this:

CGRect visibleRect = (CGRect){.origin = self.collectionView.contentOffset, .size = self.collectionView.bounds.size};
CGPoint visiblePoint = CGPointMake(CGRectGetMidX(visibleRect), CGRectGetMidY(visibleRect));
NSIndexPath *visibleIndexPath = [self.collectionView indexPathForItemAtPoint:visiblePoint];

This works especially well when each item in your collection view takes up the whole screen.

Swift version

let visibleRect = CGRect(origin: collectionView.contentOffset, size: collectionView.bounds.size)
let visiblePoint = CGPoint(x: visibleRect.midX, y: visibleRect.midY)
let visibleIndexPath = collectionView.indexPathForItem(at: visiblePoint)
12
  • 10
    I can agree, sometimes indexPathsForVisibleItems returns more cells, even if we think there shouldn't be such case. Your solution works great.
    – MP23
    Sep 17, 2014 at 15:07
  • 2
    I was totally on this kind of situation, just one fix that worked for me (but my case was with tableview), I needed to change the CGPointMake(CGRectGetMidX(visibleRect), CGRectGetMidY(visibleRect)); for CGPointMake(CGRectGetMidX(visibleRect), CGRectGetMinY(visibleRect));
    – JRafaelM
    May 12, 2015 at 16:22
  • 2
    Excellent, but if the cells have a space between them then visibleIndexPath sometimes will be nil, So if (visibleIndexPath) == nil { let cells = collectionView.visibleCells() let visibleIndexPath = collectionView.indexPathForCell(cells[0] as! UICollectionViewCell)! as NSIndexPath }
    – Husam
    Jun 19, 2015 at 17:19
  • The only solution that worked for my full screen size cells. Added Swift version as an answer below.
    – Sam Bing
    Apr 11, 2016 at 12:43
  • 1
    I wish I could upvote this more. This problem has been driving me nuts and this solution saved the day.
    – SeanT
    Feb 26, 2020 at 23:49
158

The method [collectionView visibleCells] give you all visibleCells array you want. Use it when you want to get

- (void)scrollViewDidEndDecelerating:(UIScrollView *)scrollView{
    for (UICollectionViewCell *cell in [self.mainImageCollection visibleCells]) {
        NSIndexPath *indexPath = [self.mainImageCollection indexPathForCell:cell];
        NSLog(@"%@",indexPath);
    }
}

Update to Swift 5:

func scrollViewDidEndDecelerating(_ scrollView: UIScrollView) {
    for cell in yourCollectionView.visibleCells {
        let indexPath = yourCollectionView.indexPath(for: cell)
        print(indexPath)
    }
}
7
  • Can you please elaborate on where self.mainImageCollection comes from? Many thanx in advance for your further detail. Jun 1, 2014 at 21:57
  • 1
    @BenjaminMcFerren it's the collectionview you used.
    – LE SANG
    Jun 2, 2014 at 0:37
  • 14
    The scrollViewDidScroll: delegate method provides scroll view updates whenever any scroll finishes (and is probably a better choice here). As opposed to the scrollViewDidEndDecelerating: delegate method which is only called when the scroll view "grinds to a halt [from a big scroll]" (see UIScrollView header). Sep 16, 2014 at 17:52
  • 3
    IIRC, ..DidScroll gets called many times, even during a short scroll. May or may not be a good thing, depending on what one wants to do. Jun 28, 2016 at 12:39
  • 4
    Since iOS 10 it's now also possible to use indexPathsForVisibleItems directly :)
    – Ben
    Nov 7, 2016 at 14:03
104

Swift 5:

func scrollViewDidEndDecelerating(_ scrollView: UIScrollView) {
    var visibleRect = CGRect()

    visibleRect.origin = collectionView.contentOffset
    visibleRect.size = collectionView.bounds.size

    let visiblePoint = CGPoint(x: visibleRect.midX, y: visibleRect.midY)

    guard let indexPath = collectionView.indexPathForItem(at: visiblePoint) else { return } 

    print(indexPath)
}

Working Answers Combined In Swift 2.2 :

 func scrollViewDidEndDecelerating(scrollView: UIScrollView) {

        var visibleRect = CGRect()

        visibleRect.origin = self.collectionView.contentOffset
        visibleRect.size = self.collectionView.bounds.size

        let visiblePoint = CGPointMake(CGRectGetMidX(visibleRect), CGRectGetMidY(visibleRect))

        let visibleIndexPath: NSIndexPath = self.collectionView.indexPathForItemAtPoint(visiblePoint)

        guard let indexPath = visibleIndexPath else { return } 
        print(indexPath)

    }
1
  • Getting indexpath twice, i need to get only once Aug 7, 2019 at 7:29
20

For completeness sake, this is the method that ended up working for me. It was a combination of @Anthony & @iAn's methods.

- (void)scrollViewDidEndDecelerating:(UIScrollView *)scrollView {
      CGRect visibleRect = (CGRect){.origin = self.collectionView.contentOffset, .size = self.collectionView.bounds.size};
      CGPoint visiblePoint = CGPointMake(CGRectGetMidX(visibleRect), CGRectGetMidY(visibleRect));
      NSIndexPath *visibleIndexPath = [self.collectionView indexPathForItemAtPoint:visiblePoint];
      NSLog(@"%@",visibleIndexPath);
}
15

UICollectionView current visible cell index: Swift 3, 4 and 5+

var visibleCurrentCellIndexPath: IndexPath? {
    for cell in self.collectionView.visibleCells {
        let indexPath = self.collectionView.indexPath(for: cell)
        return indexPath
     }
        
     return nil
}

As an Extension:

extension UICollectionView {
  var visibleCurrentCellIndexPath: IndexPath? {
    for cell in self.visibleCells {
      let indexPath = self.indexPath(for: cell)
      return indexPath
    }
    
    return nil
  }
}

Usage:

if let indexPath = collectionView.visibleCurrentCellIndexPath { 
   /// do something
}
2
  • Best answer. Clean and a few lines.
    – garanda
    Dec 1, 2016 at 8:45
  • 1
    Perfect answer.. Thank you Jan 3, 2020 at 6:36
14

It will probably be best to use UICollectionViewDelegate methods: (Swift 3)

// Called before the cell is displayed    
func collectionView(_ collectionView: UICollectionView, willDisplay cell: UICollectionViewCell, forItemAt indexPath: IndexPath) {
    print(indexPath.row)
}

// Called when the cell is displayed
func collectionView(_ collectionView: UICollectionView, didEndDisplaying cell: UICollectionViewCell, forItemAt indexPath: IndexPath) {
    print(indexPath.row)
}
1
  • 4
    Regarding didEndDisplaying, from the docs: Tells the delegate that the specified cell was removed from the collection view. Use this method to detect when a cell is removed from a collection view, as opposed to monitoring the view itself to see when it disappears. So I do not think didEndDisplaying is called when the cell is displayed.
    – Jonny
    Dec 26, 2017 at 10:49
11

Swift 3.0

Simplest solution which will give you indexPath for visible cells..

yourCollectionView.indexPathsForVisibleItems 

will return the array of indexpath.

Just take the first object from array like this.

yourCollectionView.indexPathsForVisibleItems.first

I guess it should work fine with Objective - C as well.

10

Just want to add for others : for some reason, I didnt not get the cell that was visible to the user when I was scrolling to previous cell in collectionView with pagingEnabled.

So I insert the code inside dispatch_async to give it some "air" and this works for me.

-(void)scrollViewDidEndDecelerating:(UIScrollView *)scrollView
{
    dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
            UICollectionViewCell * visibleCell= [[self.collectionView visibleCells] objectAtIndex:0];


            [visibleCell doSomthing];
        });
}
3
  • This really helped! I didn't realized I can use dispatch_async block to make it absolutely flawless! This is the best answer!
    – kalafun
    Oct 20, 2015 at 15:45
  • 1
    For Swift 4: DispatchQueue.main.async { when call initiates from something like func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, willDisplay cell: UITableViewCell, forRowAt indexPath: IndexPath) {
    – Jonny
    Dec 26, 2017 at 10:33
  • Some clarification: this helped me too, and I had the same/similar problem, when scrolling back to uitableviewcell containing a uicollectionview. The refresh call initiated from willDisplay cell as mentioned above. I think the problem, somewhere in UIKit, is really the same in my case as this answer.
    – Jonny
    Dec 26, 2017 at 10:39
9

For Swift 3.0

func scrollViewDidScroll(_ scrollView: UIScrollView) {
    let visibleRect = CGRect(origin: colView.contentOffset, size: colView.bounds.size)
    let visiblePoint = CGPoint(x: visibleRect.midX, y: visibleRect.midY)
    let indexPath = colView.indexPathForItem(at: visiblePoint)
}
4

converting @Anthony's answer to Swift 3.0 worked perfectly for me:

func scrollViewDidScroll(_ scrollView: UIScrollView) {

    var visibleRect = CGRect()
    visibleRect.origin = yourCollectionView.contentOffset
    visibleRect.size = yourCollectionView.bounds.size
    let visiblePoint = CGPoint(x: CGFloat(visibleRect.midX), y: CGFloat(visibleRect.midY))
    let visibleIndexPath: IndexPath? = yourCollectionView.indexPathForItem(at: visiblePoint)
    print("Visible cell's index is : \(visibleIndexPath?.row)!")
}
2

You can use scrollViewDidEndDecelerating: for this

//@property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet UICollectionView *collectionView;

   - (void)scrollViewDidEndDecelerating:(UIScrollView *)scrollView{

        for (UICollectionViewCell *cell in [self.collectionView visibleCells]) {
            NSIndexPath *indexPath = [self.collectionView indexPathForCell:cell];
            NSUInteger lastIndex = [indexPath indexAtPosition:[indexPath length] - 1];
            NSLog(@"visible cell value %d",lastIndex);
        }

    }
1

In this thread, There are so many solutions that work fine if cell takes full screen but they use collection view bounds and midpoints of Visible rect However there is a simple solution to this problem

    DispatchQueue.main.async {
        let visibleCell = self.collImages.visibleCells.first
        print(self.collImages.indexPath(for: visibleCell))
    }

by this, you can get indexPath of the visible cell. I have added DispatchQueue because when you swipe faster and if for a brief moment the next cell is shown then without dispactchQueue you'll get indexPath of briefly shown cell not the cell that is being displayed on the screen.

0

This is old question but in my case...

- (void) scrollViewWillBeginDragging:(UIScrollView *)scrollView {

    _m_offsetIdx = [m_cv indexPathForCell:m_cv.visibleCells.firstObject].row;
}

- (void) scrollViewDidEndDecelerating:(UIScrollView *)scrollView {
    _m_offsetIdx = [m_cv indexPathForCell:m_cv.visibleCells.lastObject].row;
}
0

Also check this snippet

let isCellVisible = collectionView.visibleCells.map { collectionView.indexPath(for: $0) }.contains(inspectingIndexPath)
-1

try this, it works. (in the example below i have 3 cells for example.)

    func scrollViewDidEndDecelerating(scrollView: UIScrollView) {
    let visibleRect = CGRect(origin: self.collectionView.contentOffset, size: self.collectionView.bounds.size)
    let visiblePoint = CGPointMake(CGRectGetMidX(visibleRect), CGRectGetMidY(visibleRect))
    let visibleIndexPath = self.collectionView.indexPathForItemAtPoint(visiblePoint)
    if let v = visibleIndexPath {
        switch v.item {
        case 0: setImageDescription()
            break
        case 1: setImageConditions()
            break
        case 2: setImageResults()
            break
        default: break
        }
    }
-1

Swift 3 & Swift 4:

func scrollViewDidEndDecelerating(_ scrollView: UIScrollView) {
   var visibleRect = CGRect()

   visibleRect.origin = collectionView.contentOffset
   visibleRect.size = collectionView.bounds.size

   let visiblePoint = CGPoint(x: visibleRect.midX, y: visibleRect.midY)

   guard let indexPath = collectionView.indexPathForItem(at: visiblePoint) else { return } 

   print(indexPath[1])
}

If you want to show actual number than you can add +1

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