iOS 8+ - UITextView Not Stretching Vertically in UITableViewCell - ios

I am using Auto Layout and have a UITextView in a UITableViewCell. The UITableViewCell's height is calculated automatically based on the constraints. Here is how I am specifying that the cell should be self-sizing:
override func viewDidLoad()
{
...
// Set the estimated row height
self.myTableView.estimatedRowHeight = self.myTableView.rowHeight
// Set the height of the cell row based on its constraints
self.myTableView.rowHeight = UITableViewAutomaticDimension
// Prevent extra rows from displaying
self.myTableView.tableFooterView = UIView()
...
}
I am certain that all of the constraints (leading, trailing, top, and bottom) are set properly on all of the UI elements on my UITableViewCell, but for some reason the UITextView is not stretching to fit its available text. I've tried reloading the layout and the constraints in the cellForRowAtIndexPath and the willDisplayCell methods to no avail.
If I scroll down on the table and then scroll back up to a given cell, the UITextView DOES indeed stretch properly. But upon first load of the view, it is not acceptable for some of the text to be cut off.
I've tried just about everything I can think of, and I cannot get the UITextView to stretch. Even stranger, I made a test app, the UITextView did stretch properly. It's not working on my app for some reason, though.
I'm pretty stuck and could use some help. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

I found out that my UITableViewCell had a Disclosure Indicator accessory. All I had to do was remove the accessory (set to None), and everything is working great! I'm not sure why this works, but it seems like it's a bug. Self-sizing cells should work regardless of whether or not there is an accessory on the cell.
Note
This bug appears to have been fixed in iOS 9+. For apps that need to support iOS 8, I would recommend removing the accessory from your UITableViewCell and replacing the accessory with a custom image.

Related

UITableViewCell AutoSizing Issues

I have a UITableViewCell I want to resize to content. Currently, it's cutting off the UILabel with all of the text. Also, it's completely cut off before scroll, and after it results to the below:
How do the constraints/content hugging properties need to change to allow the cell to size properly?
Ideally, the UILabels should push the size of the cell to be larger.
View controller:
self.tableView.estimatedRowHeight = 75.0
self.tableView.rowHeight = UITableViewAutomaticDimension
Ended up writing the constraints programmatically and ditching storyboards all together. Snapkit is nice.
Set the number of lines to 0 for the UILabel. It will allow for the text to appear completely.

UITableViewCell prevents UILabel from expanding height

I have a TableViewController with a custom UITableViewCell containing a single UILabel. The label will receive variable lengths of text, and should resize in height accordingly. I want to use auto layout, iOS10++.
However, it seems that the cell is preventing the label from expanding its height.
I have constraints on the label to pin top, bottom, left and right to the cell's contentView.
The label number of lines = 0, and is set to line break mode = WordWrap.
I have set the self.tableview.rowHeight to UITableViewAutomaticDimension, and have set the estimated row height to various sizes with no success.
I have increased (and decreased) the label's content hugging priority and and the vertical compression resistance, but this has no effect.
This sounds like a duplicate of so many other questions, but none I have read has solved my problem.
Some clues I have noticed:
1) If I remove the label's bottom constraint, the label expands correctly, but (of course) the cell doesn't expand, so the label cannot be fully seen after it expands below the bottom of the cell. So I conclude that the cell is preventing the label from expanding.
2) if I rotate the tableview to landscape and back to portrait, the first cell expands correctly. So something that occurs during the rotation solves the problem at least for the first cell, and also proves that the cell and label can expand as required.
I feel something is not right, but cannot figure it out. I am very close to going back to the old version of calculating the height manually and returning it in heightForRowAtIndexPath delegate method.
I would appreciate any suggestions. Thanks in advance.
I finally figured it all out.
In summary, I was configuring the cell (including setting the label's text) in tableView willDisplayCellAtIndexPath...
But it seems (obvious really) that for the autoresizing to work, the cell must be configured in tableView cellForRowAtIndexPath.
Moving the configuration into cellForRowAtIndexPath and suddenly everything started working perfectly.
Hope this helps anybody who has the same problem. I struggled with it for days.

UITableviewCell Dynamic Height Programmatically with the use of UITableViewAutomaticDimension

Hi Guys here i am suffering issue of dynamic height of UITableview Programmatically. I have set Autolayout of all view without any error
but lblDesc (UILabel) not expand with its size according to content. plz guide me
sometimes I do not need btnVideo (UIButton) so i have to hide btnVideo(UIButton) and dynamically all social networks UIButton come after lblDesc (UILabel)
Here i attached my code with only one view
UITableViewAutomaticDimension
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5mabdphYDhzWG9UMzM2MTV6cms/view?usp=sharing
You should use UITextView instead of UILabel.
Btw, never forget you setup constraints between text view and container views for all edges correctly, so according to your text size, the whole cell will be resized dynamically.
I have reviewed your code. tableview has correct setting.
Just setup correct layout constraints so that table view could know how it should change the height of cell.
Cheers

UICollectionView inside of UITableViewCell - AutoLayout

I'm using a UICollectionView inside of a UITableViewCell. It's all working fine, but i have some issues with Auto Layout. The UICollectionView should just show the cells without horizontal or vertical scrolling.Because now I have a the scrollable UICollectionView inside my UITableViewCell the following code doesn't work for me to get the dynamic table cells' height for this cell, but for other cells.
self.tableView.rowHeight = UITableViewAutomaticDimension
self.tableView.estimatedRowHeight = 44
I unchecked the option "scrolling enabled" in storyboard, but the result is, that i just can't scroll and don't see the rest of my collectionView.
Right now I simply set constraints from my UICollectionView to the UITableViewCell to all edges, but it's not working.
Would be great if someone have an idea.
Thanks a lot.
You'll need to have a height constraint set on your UICollectionView. If you've just pinned your UICollectionView to your UITableViewCell, it's getting its height from the table cell and the table cell is getting its height from the collection cell, so neither really knows what to do in that situation.
I did meet a similar issue before. It turned out that I haven't fully set up the relationship between the UITableViewCell and its containing elements so that they don't know how far to grow. I don't think this is related to embedded scrolling view. Just make sure that you have constraints set up between the UI elements inside the UITableViewCell and the bottom of UITableViewCell.

Detected a case where constraints ambiguously suggest a height of zero

After updating to Xcode 6.1 beta 2 when I run my app that contains tableview cells, the debug assistant says:
Warning once only: Detected a case where constraints ambiguously suggest a height of zero for a tableview cell's content view. We're considering the collapse unintentional and using standard height instead.
Before, when I used Xcode 5 on this project, I would get a few errors but those have gone away since I upgraded. I have no other errors or warnings now. I have already tried adjusting the sizes of all the tableview cells and also tried using standard height but I still get the same warning:
Warning once only: Detected a case where constraints ambiguously suggest a height of zero for a tableview cell's content view. We're considering the collapse unintentional and using standard height instead.
I have also read through all similar topics on this but none of their solutions help. When I test the app with the simulator, the app runs fine except the pictures that are supposed to be in the tableView cells aren't there.
You're encountering the side effect of a fantastic new feature in iOS8's Tableviews: Automatic Row Heights.
In iOS 7, you either had rows of a fixed size (set with tableView.rowHeight), or you'd write code to calculate the height of your cells and you'd return that in tableView:heightForRowAtIndexPath. Writing code for the calculation of a cell's height could be quite complex if you had numerous views in your cell and you had different heights to consider at different font sizes. Add in Dynamic Type and the process was a pain in the ass.
In iOS 8, you can still do the above, but now the height of the rows can be determined by iOS, provided that you've configured the content of your cell using Auto Layout. This is huge benefit for developers, because as the dynamic font size changes, or the user modifies the text size using Accessibility Settings, your UI can be adaptive to the new size. It also means if you have a UILabel that can have multiple rows of text, your cell can now grow to accommodate those when the cells needs to, and shrink when it does not, so there isn't any unnecessary whitespace.
The warning message you're seeing is telling you that there aren't enough constraints in your cell for Auto Layout to inform the tableview of the height of the cell.
To use dynamic cell height, which, along with the techniques already mentioned by other posters, will also get rid of this message, you need to ensure your cell has sufficient constraints to bind the UI items to the top and bottom of the cell. If you've used Auto Layout before, you are probably accustomed to setting Top + Leading constraints, but dynamic row height also requires bottom constraints.
The layout pass works like this, which occurs immediately before a cell is displayed on screen, in a just-in-time manner:
Dimensions for content with intrinsic sizes is calculated. This includes UILabels and UIImageViews, where their dimensions are based on the text or UIImages they contain, respectively. Both of these views will consider their width to be a known (because you've set constraints for trailing/leading edges, or you set explicit widths, or you used horizontal constraints that eventually reveal a width from side to side). Let's say a label has a paragraph of text ("number of lines" is set to 0 so it'll auto-wrap), it can only be 310 points across, so it's determined to be 120pt high at the current font size.
The UI is laid out according to your positioning constraints. There is a constraint at the bottom of the label that connects to the bottom margin of the cell. Since the label has grown to be 120 points tall, and since it's bound to the bottom of the cell by the constraint, it must push the cell "down" (increasing the height of the cell) to satisfy the constraint that says "bottom of the label is always standard distance from the bottom of the cell.
The error message you reported occurs if that bottom constraint is missing, in which case there is nothing to "push" the bottom of the cell away from the top of the cell, which is the ambiguity that's reported: with nothing to push the bottom from the top, the cell collapses. But Auto Layout detects that, too, and falls back to using the standard row height.
For what it's worth, and mostly to have a rounded answer, if you do implement iOS 8's Auto Layout-based dynamic row heights, you should implement tableView:estimatedHeightForRowAtIndexPath:. That estimate method can use rough values for your cells, and it'll be called when the table view is initially loaded. It helps UIKit draw things like the scrollbar, which can't be drawn unless the tableview knows how much content it can scroll through, but does't need totally accurate sizes, since it's just a scrollbar. This lets the calculation of the actual row height be deferred until the moment the cell is needed, which is less computationally intensive and lets your UITableView be presented quicker.
Three things have managed to silence this warning so far. You can pick up the most convenient for you. Nothing pretty though.
To set up default cell's height in viewDidLoad
self.tableView.rowHeight = 44;
Go to storyboard and change row height on your tableview to something different than 44.
To implement tableview's delegate method heightForRowAtIndexPath
- (CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath
{
return 44;
}
Weird.
To resolve this without a programmatic method, adjust the row height of the table view in the Size Inspector from the storyboard.
I had this problem after creating a custom UITableViewCell and adding my subviews to the cell instead of its contentView.
This is an autolayout issue. Make sure that your subviews have all the constraints. For me, the bottom constraint was missing for the Title Label in the cell. When I added that, the warning went away and everything showed up perfectly.
Just enable Self-Sizing Table View Cells
tableView.estimatedRowHeight = 85.0
tableView.rowHeight = UITableViewAutomaticDimension
& make sure you added constraints on all sides of UITableViewCell as-
Example Link 1
Example Link 2
If u are using static cell or dynamic cell ,simply add some row height to table view in inspector table and uncheck the automatic to the right side of row height ,that's it u will stop getting this warning .
I got this warning today. Here is what made it disappear for me(in interface builder)
1.Set the row height field for the table view to something other than 44
2 Set the row height field for the tableView cell to something other than 44
I did not have to make any changes in code
In my case, I was building the cell programmatically and kept getting this error.
I was adding the subviews and constraints in the UITableViewCell's init method like this:
addSubview(rankingLabel)
addConstraints(cellConstraints)
I solved the issue by adding them to the cell's contentView instead:
contentView.addSubview(rankingLabel)
contentView.addConstraints(cellConstraints)
Set the estimated row height to zero and the warning disappears:
If you have created a Custom tableViewCell for tableView, make sure you have given both bottom and top constraints to you cells,
you could also get this message if your subviews inside custom cells are aligned in center Y which wouldnt pop any error message but would mess up with identifying height of row for tableview in turn like in Image I have attached , here we have both top and bottom constraints
When you create a Custom Cell for tableView you must specific row height or top and bottom constraints for you custom cell's subviews inside cell (e.g. label in custom cell like in below image)
But if this doesn't work you can try setting row height for your cell instead of being automatic like in this image
But be sure if you turn that automatic tick off you have to adjust your row size for changes programmatically which could have been done automatically
I got this Warning today All I did is just added one extra line to my code
tableView.rowHeight = 200;
add this line of code inside the
func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, numberOfRowsInSection section:Int) -> Int {
...
}
and the final code look like
func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, numberOfRowsInSection section: Int) -> Int {
tableView.rowHeight = 200;
...
}
this code will increase the table Row cell height to 200 the default height is 44
I too experienced this warning with moving to Xcode 6 GM. I was only getting the warning when I rotated the device back to its original position.
I am using custom UITableViewCells. The storyboard table view is set to my custom size (100.0 in my case). While the table cells render properly as they have in previous releases, I did not like warning message.
In addition to the above ideas, I added this
- (CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
return 100.0;
}
Screen renders... responds to rotation and no more warning messages.
In xcode 6.0.1 I had removed this warnings specifying the row height using:
- (CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
return 44.0;
}
You may also see this message if your only constraints are set to align all items vertically and you don't have/want a height specified for the cell. If you set a top/bottom constraint on the item the warning will disappear.
I had this problem when my labels and views in the custom tableViewCell were constrained to the customCell, not its Content View. When I cleared the constraints and connected them to cells Content View the problem was solved.
I had the same error message,
make sure all your outlets are valid like table view and tableview Constraints
I have also similar issue for custom tableview cell which has dynamic row height. Dynamic height wasn't reflected and got the same warning in console. The solution is Adding subviews to cell instead of contentView. BTW, I have created subviews programatically.
I have this issue on TableViewCells where the constraints are set on initialisation but where the cell's contents are loaded afterwards, this means the autolayout engine can't determine the height. The other solutions here don't work because I need the cell's height to be UITableView.automaticDimension.
I just added an extra constraint to the cell:
contentView.heightAnchor.constraint(equalToConstant: 44, priority: .defaultLow)
In the storyboard set the cell Row height field with the same value as Row height in tableView (both with the same value worked for me).
If you add heightForRowAtIndexPath function to your code it may induce a performance issue because it will be called for each cell so be careful.
If you are making a dynamic height calculation,
you should have all elements linked to each other in terms of constraints like top and bottom.
you should definitely have a bottom constraint that is linked to the element at the bottom of your cell
if you are extending your ViewController class with UITableView and also using navigation controller to show the screen then you dont need to perform segue with identifier this may cause an error of identifier ViewController, you can use pushViewController method to show the chat screen in order to get rid from this error so here is the code just paste it in to your UItableView delegate
let chatBox = ChatBoxViewController()
navigationController?.pushViewController(chatBox, animated: true)
just put the name of your viewcontroller which you want to show next and yeah done.
I have same error, due to this line this error was shown.
self.layer.backgroundColor = UIColor(white: 1, alpha: 0.2) as! CGColor
I just change the line as following to fix the error
self.layer.backgroundColor = UIColor(white: 1, alpha: 0.2).cgColor

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