Like others mentioned you can use willSet
to detect changes. In an override, however, you do not need assign the value to super, you are just observing the existing change.
A couple things you can observe from the following playground:
- Overriding a property for
willSet/didSet
still calls super for get/set
. You can tell because the state changes from .normal
to .selected
.
- willSet and didSet are called even when the value is not changing, so you will probably want do the compare the value of
selected
to either newValue
in willSet
or oldValue
in didSet
to determine whether or not to animate.
import UIKit
class MyButton : UIButton {
override var isSelected: Bool {
willSet {
print("changing from \(isSelected) to \(newValue)")
}
didSet {
print("changed from \(oldValue) to \(isSelected)")
}
}
}
let button = MyButton()
button.state == .normal
button.isSelected = true // Both events fire on change.
button.state == .selected
button.isSelected = true // Both events still fire.