I have a UITableView
with some swipe actions. One of them presents an action sheet via UIAlertController
, and lets the user change category of a UITableViewCell
, making the cell appear in another section.
What I try to achieve is to reload the tableView after the choice has been made, but it seems like the alert is called asynchronously. Can someone help me understand the call stack and where to put the tableview.reloadData()
call?
let switchTypeAction = UIContextualAction(style: .normal, title: nil) { [weak self] (_,_,success) in
let ac = UIAlertController(title: "Change type", message: nil, preferredStyle: .actionSheet)
for type in orderItem.orderItemType.allValues where type != item.type {
ac.addAction(UIAlertAction(title: "\(type.prettyName)", style: .default, handler: self?.handleChangeType(item: item, type: type)))
}
ac.addAction(UIAlertAction(title: "Cancel", style: .cancel))
self?.present(ac, animated: true)
tableview.reloadData()
success(true)
}
func handleChangeType(item: orderItem, type: orderItem.orderItemType) -> (_ alertAction:UIAlertAction) -> (){
return { alertAction in
item.type = type
}
}
I would assume that the calls were being executed in this order, but when debugging I see that self?.present(ac, animated: true)
are actually extecuted after the block, so the reload and the success response are executed first. Does this have anything to do with the closure being @escaping?