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In my application i wan't to move/animate my ViewController's view to upward direction after appearance of keyboard over UITextField.

and this must support for all orientation.i.e:
UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait
UIInterfaceOrientationPortraitUpsideDown
UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeLeft
UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeRight.

For UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait my code is working fine as shown below: enter image description here

But for UIInterfaceOrientationPortraitUpsideDown and UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeLeft it is not working. please see below screenshots:

For UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeLeft view moves towards right side instead of upward side.

enter image description here

For UIInterfaceOrientationPortraitUpsideDown view moves towards down side instead of upward side.

enter image description here

This is only issue in iOS 7. I have checked this in iOS 8, it is working fine.

I have used below code for animating UIView on keyboard appearance:

static const CGFloat KEYBOARD_ANIMATION_DURATION = 0.3;
static const CGFloat MINIMUM_SCROLL_FRACTION = 0.2;
static const CGFloat MAXIMUM_SCROLL_FRACTION = 0.8;
static const CGFloat PORTRAIT_KEYBOARD_HEIGHT = 264;
static const CGFloat LANDSCAPE_KEYBOARD_HEIGHT = 352;

    -(void) textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
    {
        CGRect textFieldRect = [self.view.window convertRect:textField.bounds fromView:textField];

        CGRect viewRect = [self.view.window convertRect:self.view.bounds fromView:self.view];

        CGFloat midline = textFieldRect.origin.y + 0.5 * textFieldRect.size.height;

        CGFloat numerator = midline - viewRect.origin.y - MINIMUM_SCROLL_FRACTION * viewRect.size.height;
        CGFloat denominator = (MAXIMUM_SCROLL_FRACTION - MINIMUM_SCROLL_FRACTION) * viewRect.size.height;
        CGFloat heightFraction = numerator / denominator;

        if (heightFraction < 0.0)
        {
            heightFraction = 0.0;
        }
        else if (heightFraction > 1.0)
        {
            heightFraction = 1.0;
        }

        UIInterfaceOrientation orientation =
        [[UIApplication sharedApplication] statusBarOrientation];
        if (orientation == UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait ||
            orientation == UIInterfaceOrientationPortraitUpsideDown)
        {
            animatedDistance = floor(PORTRAIT_KEYBOARD_HEIGHT * heightFraction);
        }
        else
        {
            animatedDistance = floor(LANDSCAPE_KEYBOARD_HEIGHT * heightFraction);
        }

        if(self.view.frame.origin.y != 0.000000)
        {
            self.view.frame = CGRectMake(self.view.frame.origin.x,0.0,self.view.frame.size.width,self.view.frame.size.height);
        }

        CGRect viewFrame = self.view.frame;
        viewFrame.origin.y -= animatedDistance;

        NSLog(@"View frame y pos did start: %f ",animatedDistance);

        [UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
        [UIView setAnimationBeginsFromCurrentState:YES];
        [UIView setAnimationDuration:KEYBOARD_ANIMATION_DURATION];

        [self.view setFrame:viewFrame];

        [UIView commitAnimations];
    }

    -(void) textFieldDidEndEditing:(UITextField *)textField
    {
        CGRect viewFrame = self.view.frame;
        viewFrame.origin.y += animatedDistance;

        NSLog(@"View frame y pos did end: %f ",animatedDistance);

        [UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
        [UIView setAnimationBeginsFromCurrentState:YES];
        [UIView setAnimationDuration:KEYBOARD_ANIMATION_DURATION];

        [self.view setFrame:viewFrame];

        [UIView commitAnimations];
    }

Thanks

1 Answer 1

1

Gulp. Can I make some suggestions ?

First, I would attach an event to UIKeyboardWillShowNotification and UIKeyboardWillHideNotification rather than using the textFieldDidBeginEditing event.

Supposing I ran your app on my iPad, but had a Bluetooth keyboard connected. I would tap in the text box, your UIView would shift up, but the iPad wouldn't display an onscreen keyboard as it knows I wouldn't need it.

The other advantage is that you're currently using hardcoded heights for the onscreen keyboard. Ooooh, this isn't a good idea.

Have a look at my screenshot in this posting to give one (just one!) example of why this isn't a good idea:

iPad keyboard height

If you choose to go down the UIKeyboardWillShowNotification route, you can measure the correct height of the keyboard...

-(void)onKeyboardWillShow:(NSNotification*)notification
{
    //  The user has turned on the onscreen keyboard.
    //
    NSDictionary *info = [notification userInfo];
    NSValue *kbFrame = [info objectForKey:UIKeyboardFrameEndUserInfoKey];
    CGRect keyboardFrame = [kbFrame CGRectValue];
    keyboardFrame = [self.view convertRect:keyboardFrame fromView:nil];

    CGFloat keyboardHeight = keyboardFrame.size.height;
}

Here's a sample XCode project I've knocked up, which demonstrates how to resize a control, to make it (almost) fill the entire screen, and resize it when the device's orientation & onscreen keyboard visibility changes:

OnScreenKeyboardTest XCode 6.1 project

You'll see that it has a "Dismiss" button, which makes the onscreen keyboard go away. This code (should) run on all iPhones & iPads.

enter image description here

Phew ! Hope this helps.

1
  • Cool ! One thing I've found with this XCode hell... life becomes much easier when you can see a working example ! Glad it helped. Jan 31, 2015 at 9:55

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