just make sure you
- Set the delegate & datasource for your collection view to self, either in storyboard (ctrl+drag the collection view to the yellow dot on top of the view and select “delegate” and “dataSource”) or via code using collectionView.delegate = self and collectionView.dataSource = self
- set the scroll direction in the storyboard (in the collection view properties panel) or programmatically by defining the collectionView’s layout to UICollectionViewFlowLayout() and then setting layout.scrollDirection = .horizontal
it’s not clear in your question so I’ll go ahead and ask, is the collection view inside a UITableViewCell’s background view? I recommend this approach. You can then set the cell’s height and the view collection’s scroll direction to horizontal either in storyboard or in code. If you need more cells in the table view with a different format, just use different sections.
Basically what I mean is something like this
override func numberOfSections(in tableView: UITableView) -> Int {
return 2
}
override func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, numberOfRowsInSection section: Int) -> Int {
if section == 0 {
return 1
} else {
return 1
}
}
override func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, cellForRowAt indexPath: IndexPath) -> UITableViewCell {
if indexPath.section == 0 {
let cell = tableView.dequeueReusableCell(withIdentifier: "cell", for: indexPath) as! tableViewCellWithCollectionView
if let layout = cell.collectionView.collectionViewLayout as? UICollectionViewFlowLayout {
layout.scrollDirection = .horizontal
}
return cell
} else {
// …
}
}
Then create a class with your cell
class tableViewCellWithCollectionView: UITableViewCell {
var collectionView = UICollectionView()
}
Then of course you’ll need to add UICollectionViewDelegate & UICollectionViewDataSource protocols to the table view cell’s class and format your collection view.
Hope it helped :)
.backgroundView
. And... does your collection view code work properly when it's added to a view by itself, not part of the.backgroundView
?.backgroundView
will be "competing" for gestures. UIKit waits until the touch has moved enough to determine the direction (horizontal or vertical) and then either the collection view or the table view will "capture" the gesture. Quick example here - pastebin.com/hFfn9Bsy - seems to work reasonably well.