Reputation: 14748
I've set up a UITableView with several custom UITableViewCell's that have some UITextField's and UISwitch's (based on Settings.app). My question is, when a user clicks the Save button in the navigation bar, what's the beat way to access these text fields and switch controls to save their values?
Upvotes: 7
Views: 12586
Reputation: 1257
You can also have your custom cells keep a reference to your higher-level view controller and send it notifications when the user updates values in them. Basically, copy the delegate pattern used by many library objects in UIKit.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 17170
If you don't follow Ed's suggestion, you are probably best retaining your text view in the custom cell and adding a property to access the view.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 39700
My suggestion is to not use custom UITableViewCell
s. I used to do it your way, but there's a much better way. Use the accessoryView
property of the UITableViewCell
, which you can assign an arbitrary view to, such as a UITextField
or UISwitch
. It shows up exactly as it would in the Settings application.
Then, when you need to access it, just use
NSString *text = ((UITextField *)cell.accessoryView).text;
However, you must be careful about setting up cells and accessing their values. If any cell goes offscreen, it will be removed and you will not be able to access the text field. What you want to do when setting up your cell is:
cell.accessoryView = nil; //Make sure any old accessory view isn't there.
if (/*cell needs text field*/) {
UITextField *textField = [[[UITextField alloc] initWithFrame:frame] autorelease];
textField.text = savedValue;
cell.accessoryView = textField;
[textField addTarget:self action:@selector(textChanged:) forControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
}
...
- (void) textChanged:(UITextField *)source {
self.savedValue = source.text;
}
Upvotes: 15