0

I have a subclass of UIScrollView called MyScrollView. There is a subview called contentView inside MyScrollView. The width constraint is set to be the contentSize of MyScrollView.

   private func setupSubviews() {
      contentView = ContentView()
      contentView.backgroundColor = UIColor.blue
      contentView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = false
      contentView.isUserInteractionEnabled = true
    
    
      self.addSubview(contentView)
    
      contentView.leadingAnchor.constraint(equalTo: self.leadingAnchor).isActive = true
      contentView.trailingAnchor.constraint(equalTo: self.trailingAnchor).isActive = true
      contentView.topAnchor.constraint(equalTo: self.topAnchor).isActive = true
      contentView.bottomAnchor.constraint(equalTo: self.bottomAnchor).isActive = true
      
      // create contentView's Width and Height constraints
      cvWidthConstraint = contentView.widthAnchor.constraint(equalToConstant: 0.0)
      cvHeightConstraint = contentView.heightAnchor.constraint(equalToConstant: 0.0)
           
    // activate them
      cvWidthConstraint.isActive = true
      cvHeightConstraint.isActive = true


      cvWidthConstraint.constant = myWidthConstant //<--- problem here if myWidthConstant is very high, such as 512000
      cvHeightConstraint.constant = frame.height
      contentView.layoutIfNeeded()
}

The problem is if later I set cvWidthConstraint.constant to a very high value such as 521000, I get a warning:

   This NSLayoutConstraint is being configured with a constant that exceeds internal limits.  A smaller value will be substituted, but this problem should be fixed. Break on BOOL _NSLayoutConstraintNumberExceedsLimit(void) to debug.  This will be logged only once.  This may break in the future.

I wonder how does one set UIScrollView content size to be very high values?

5
  • "how does one set UIScrollView content size to be very high values?" -- one doesn't. You need to describe what you're actually trying to do. No user is going to scroll 500-thousand points.
    – DonMag
    Mar 4, 2022 at 13:18
  • Well, a user can locally zoom 1000x at a point to scale the content and browse within the visible rect instead of whole scrollview. There are many use cases, such as viewing video frames at frame level in a 15 minute long video (30 frames/sec), or viewing audio samples with precision (there are 44100 float samples/sec). Mar 4, 2022 at 14:57
  • Then you need to rethink your approach and only manage the frames needed to display.
    – DonMag
    Mar 4, 2022 at 15:19
  • That's what I am doing for one video or audio file. But when you have a complex timeline with multiple kinds of subviews in the scroll view, it becomes lot more complex. Mar 4, 2022 at 15:45
  • "it becomes lot more complex" -- sure... that's why people get paid to do this. A 15-minute 30fps video is 27000 frames. Even if you could set a scroll view's content width to a large enough number, there's no way memory would support that many frame images.
    – DonMag
    Mar 4, 2022 at 16:21

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.