Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
540 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

objective c - iOS: TapGestureRecognizer Issues

So I have an app that behaves like a photo gallery and I'm implementing the ability for the user to delete the images. Here is the setup: I have 9 UIImageViews, imageView, imageView2, etc. I also have an "Edit" button, and a tapGesture action method. I dragged a Tap Gesture Recognizer over onto my view in IB, and attached it to each one of the UIImageViews. I also attached the tapGesture action method to each of the UIImageViews. Ideally, I would like the method to only become active when the "Edit" button is pressed. When the user taps Edit, then taps on the picture they want to delete, I would like a UIAlertView to appear, asking if they are sure they want to delete it. Here is the code I'm using:

- (IBAction)editButtonPressed:(id)sender {
    editButton.hidden = YES;
    backToGalleryButton.hidden = NO;
    tapToDeleteLabel.hidden = NO;
}

- (IBAction)tapGesture:(UITapGestureRecognizer*)gesture
{

    UIAlertView *deleteAlertView = [[UIAlertView alloc] initWithTitle:@"Delete"
                                                              message:@"Are you sure you want to delete this photo?"
                                                             delegate:self
                                                    cancelButtonTitle:@"No"
                                                    otherButtonTitles:@"Yes", nil];
    [deleteAlertView show];

    if (buttonIndex != [alertView cancelButtonIndex]) {

        UIImageView *view = [self.UIImageView];
        if (view) {
            [self.array removeObject:view];
        }


        CGPoint tapLocation = [gesture locationInView: self.view];
        for (UIImageView *imageView in self.view.subviews) {
            if (CGRectContainsPoint(self.UIImageView.frame, tapLocation)) {
                ((UIImageView *)[self.view]).image =nil;
 }

}
        [self.user setObject:self.array forKey:@"images"];
}
}

This code is obviously riddled with errors: "Use of undeclared identifier button index" on this line: if (buttonIndex != [alertView cancelButtonIndex])

"Property UIImageView not found on object of type PhotoViewController" on this line UIImageView *view = [self.UIImageView];

And "Expected identifier" on this line ((UIImageView *)[self.view]).image =nil;

I'm very new to programming, and I'm surprised that I even made it this far. So, I'm just trying to figure out how I need to edit my code so that the errors go away, and that it can be used whenever one of the 9 image views is tapped, and also so that this method only fires when the Edit button is pushed first. I was using tags earlier, and it worked great, but I save the images via NSData, so I can't use tags anymore. Any help is much appreciated, thanks!

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Reply

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

First, you don't want to attach the tap gesture to the image views. Also, if you are going to have more than 9 images, you may want a scroll view, or handle scrolling separately. First, remove that gesture recognizer and all its connections.

Next, determine what type of view you will use as your gallery canvas. A simple View, or a ScrollView, or whatever... it doesn't really matter right now, just to get it working. You want to ctrl-drag that view into your interface definition, so it drops an IBOutlet for the view (that way you can reference it in code).

You will place your ImageViews onto the view I just mentioned.

You can have an internal flag for the gesture recognizer, but it also has a property that use can enable/disable it whenever you want. Thus, you can have it active/inactive fairly easily.

All you want to do is drop a single tap-gesture-recognizer onto your controller, and connect it to the implementation section of the controller. It will generate a stub for handling the recognizer. It will interpret taps "generally" for the controller, and call your code whenever a tap is made on the view.

Some more code...

Creates a frame for the "new" image in the scroll view.

- (CGRect)frameForData:(MyData*)data atIndex:(NSUInteger)idx
{
    CGPoint topLeft;
    int row = idx / 4;
    int col = idx % 4;
    topLeft.x = (col+1)*HORIZ_SPACING + THUMBNAIL_WIDTH * (col);
    topLeft.y = (row+1)*VERT_SPACING + THUMBNAIL_HEIGHT * (row);
    return CGRectMake(topLeft.x, topLeft.y, THUMBNAIL_WIDTH, THUMBNAIL_HEIGHT);
}

Creates an image view for each piece of metadata, and a small border.

- (UIImageView*)createImageViewFor:(MetaData*)metadata
{
    UIImageView *imageView = [[UIImageView alloc] initWithImage:metadata.lastImage];
    imageView.frame = CGRectMake(0, 0, THUMBNAIL_WIDTH, THUMBNAIL_HEIGHT);;
    imageView.layer.borderColor = [[UIColor blackColor] CGColor];
    imageView.layer.borderWidth = 2.0;
    imageView.userInteractionEnabled = YES;
    return imageView;
}

This is where the views are created and added to the parent...

    imageView = [self createImageViewFor:metadata];
    //[data.imageView sizeToFit];

    // Make sure the scrollView contentSize represents the data
    CGRect lastFrame = [self frameForData:data atIndex:self.data.count-1];
    CGFloat newHeight = lastFrame.origin.y + lastFrame.size.height;
    if (self.bookshelfScrollView.contentSize.height < newHeight) {
        CGSize newSize = self.bookshelfScrollView.contentSize;
        newSize.height = newHeight;
        self.bookshelfScrollView.contentSize = newSize;
    }
    [self.bookshelfScrollView addSubview:data.imageView];

So, you just create each frame, add them to the view, and the only thing you have to do is enable user interaction on them, because otherwise the scroll view does not allow the gesture through.

OK... Looking at the code you posted... since you didn't say what was wrong with it... hard to say... The below is your code... My comments are, well, Comments...

- (IBAction)editButtonPressed:(id)sender {
    editButton.hidden = YES;
    backToGalleryButton.hidden = NO;
    tapToDeleteLabel.hidden = NO;
}
- (IBAction)tapGesture:(UITapGestureRecognizer*)gesture
{
    // I don't think I'd do this here, but it shouldn't cause "problems."
    UIAlertView *deleteAlertView = [[UIAlertView alloc] initWithTitle:@"Delete"
                                                              message:@"Are you sure you want to delete this photo?"
                                                             delegate:self
                                                    cancelButtonTitle:@"No"
                                                    otherButtonTitles:@"Yes", nil];
    [deleteAlertView show];

    // In your controller, you have the main view, which is the view
    // on which you added your UIViews.  You need that view.  Add it as an IBOutlet
    // You should know how to do that...  ctrl-drag to the class INTERFACE source.
    // Assuming you name it "galleryView"

    // Take the tap location from the gesture, and make sure it is in the
    // coordinate space of the view.  Loop through all the imageViews and
    // find the one that contains the point where the finger was taped.
    // Then, "remove" that one from its superview...
    CGPoint tapLocation = [gesture locationInView: self.galleryView];
    for (UIImageView *imageView in self.galleryView.subviews) {
        if (CGRectContainsPoint(imageView.frame, tapLocation)) {
            [imageView removeFromSuperview];
        }
    }
}

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
OGeek|极客中国-欢迎来到极客的世界,一个免费开放的程序员编程交流平台!开放,进步,分享!让技术改变生活,让极客改变未来! Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...