Jared Chu
Jared Chu

Reputation: 2862

How to add UIActionSheet button check mark?

I wonder how to add check mark to the right of actionSheet button the simplest way? Bellow is a screenshot of Podcasts app.

enter image description here

Upvotes: 18

Views: 16629

Answers (5)

Ostap4ik
Ostap4ik

Reputation: 53

Swift implementation:

class Controller: UIViewController {

    var isFirstButtonChecked = true

    @IBAction func buttonTapped(_ sender: UIButton?) {
        let firstButton = UIAlertAction(title: "First Button", style: .default, handler: { [unowned self] _ in
            self.isFirstButtonChecked = true
            print("First Button tapped")
        })
        //Here's the main magic; it's called Key-Value Coding, or KVC:
        firstButton.setValue(isFirstButtonChecked, forKey: "checked")

        let secondButton = UIAlertAction(title: "Second Button", style: .default, handler: { [unowned self] _ in
            self.isFirstButtonChecked = false
            print("Second Button tapped")
        })
        secondButton.setValue(!isFirstButtonChecked, forKey: "checked")

        let cancel = UIAlertAction(title: "Cancel", style: .cancel, handler: nil)

        let alert = UIAlertController(title: nil, message: nil, preferredStyle: .actionSheet)

        alert.addAction(firstButton)
        alert.addAction(secondButton)
        alert.addAction(cancel)
        self.present(alert, animated: true, completion: nil)
    }
}

You can also provide checkmark for bigger number of buttons using an enum:

class Controller: UIViewController {

    enum ButtonChecked {
        case first
        case second
        case third
        case forth
    }

    var buttonChecked: ButtonChecked = .first

    @IBAction func buttonTapped(_ sender: UIButton?) {
        let firstButton = UIAlertAction(title: "First Button", style: .default, handler: { [unowned self] _ in
            self.buttonChecked = .first
            print("First Button tapped")
        })

        let secondButton = UIAlertAction(title: "Second Button", style: .default, handler: { [unowned self] _ in
            self.buttonChecked = .second
            print("Second Button tapped")
        })

        let thirdButton = UIAlertAction(title: "Third Button", style: .default, handler: { [unowned self] _ in
            self.buttonChecked = .third
            print("Third Button tapped")
        })

        let forthButton = UIAlertAction(title: "Forth Button", style: .default, handler: { [unowned self] _ in
            self.buttonChecked = .forth
            print("Forth Button tapped")
        })

        let cancel = UIAlertAction(title: "Cancel", style: .cancel, handler: nil)

        switch buttonChecked {
        case .first:
            firstButton.setValue(true, forKey: "checked")
        case .second:
            secondButton.setValue(true, forKey: "checked")
        case .third:
            thirdButton.setValue(true, forKey: "checked")
        case .forth:
            forthButton.setValue(true, forKey: "checked")
        }

        let alert = UIAlertController(title: nil, message: nil, preferredStyle: .actionSheet)

        alert.addAction(firstButton)
        alert.addAction(secondButton)
        alert.addAction(thirdButton)
        alert.addAction(forthButton)
        alert.addAction(cancel)
        self.present(alert, animated: true, completion: nil)
    }
}

Upvotes: 4

Jared Chu
Jared Chu

Reputation: 2862

Note that the solution can crash in a future update to iOS. I'm accessing undocumented private APIs. Such solutions are very fragile. Please see the comments below.

Finally I got the answer by using UIAlertController:

UIAlertController *customActionSheet = [UIAlertController alertControllerWithTitle:nil message:nil preferredStyle:UIAlertControllerStyleActionSheet];

UIAlertAction *firstButton = [UIAlertAction actionWithTitle:@"First Button" style:UIAlertActionStyleDefault handler:^(UIAlertAction * action) {
    //click action
}];
[firstButton setValue:[UIColor blackColor] forKey:@"titleTextColor"];
[firstButton setValue:[UIColor blackColor] forKey:@"imageTintColor"];
[firstButton setValue:@true forKey:@"checked"];

UIAlertAction *secondButton = [UIAlertAction actionWithTitle:@"Second Button" style:UIAlertActionStyleDefault handler:^(UIAlertAction * action) {
    //click action
}];
[secondButton setValue:[UIColor blackColor] forKey:@"titleTextColor"];

UIAlertAction *cancelButton = [UIAlertAction actionWithTitle:@"Cancel" style:UIAlertActionStyleCancel handler:^(UIAlertAction *action){
    //cancel
}];
[cancelButton setValue:[UIColor blackColor] forKey:@"titleTextColor"];

[customActionSheet addAction:firstButton];
[customActionSheet addAction:secondButton];
[customActionSheet addAction:cancelButton];

[self presentViewController:customActionSheet animated:YES completion:nil];

And this is the result:

UIActionSheet button check mark

Upvotes: 47

Harjot Singh
Harjot Singh

Reputation: 6927

Swift Version: 4.1

I came across this implementation using creating extension over UIAlertController.

extension UIAlertController {
static func actionSheetWithItems<A : Equatable>(items : [(title : String, value : A)], currentSelection : A? = nil, action : @escaping (A) -> Void) -> UIAlertController {
    let controller = UIAlertController(title: nil, message: nil, preferredStyle: .actionSheet)
    for (var title, value) in items {
        if let selection = currentSelection, value == selection {
            // Note that checkmark and space have a neutral text flow direction so this is correct for RTL
            title = "✔︎ " + title
        }
        controller.addAction(
            UIAlertAction(title: title, style: .default) {_ in
                action(value)
            }
        )
    }
    return controller
}

}

Implementation:

   func openGenderSelectionPopUp() {
     let selectedValue = "Men" //update this for selected value
     let action = UIAlertController.actionSheetWithItems(items: [("Men","Men"),("Women","Women"),("Both","Both")], currentSelection: selectedValue, action: { (value)  in
        self.lblGender.text = value
     })
     action.addAction(UIAlertAction.init(title: ActionSheet.Button.cancel, style: UIAlertActionStyle.cancel, handler: nil))
     //Present the controller
     self.present(action, animated: true, completion: nil)
}

Final Result:

Select Gender

Hope that helps!

Thanks

Upvotes: 8

tagirkaZ
tagirkaZ

Reputation: 469

Another option is just to add a check mark character to a button title, like this "Title ✓". It will be next to the title, not at the right side of the button, but I think it's not a very big problem.

Upvotes: 4

KKRocks
KKRocks

Reputation: 8322

Try this trick :

  • Learn how to show a ViewController as a pop-up
    • Add UITable to a ViewController
    • Show items in a UITable
    • Customize the UITable by adding custom cells
    • In each of the custom cells add a button
    • That button will have two kinds of images, one blank box and the other box with a check mark
    • when user touches a table cell you need to change the button image corresponding to that table row so the user thinks they are checking or unchecking the box
    • and lastly add a done button at the bottom to dismiss the viewcontroller

Google all these items for tutorials. As I said this is not a simple task as there is no out of the box check mark function in Xcode.

From : https://stackoverflow.com/a/40542931/3901620

Upvotes: 0

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