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An easy-to-use UITableViewCell subclass that implements a swippable content view which exposes utility buttons (similar to iOS 7 Mail Application)

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SWTableViewCell

An easy-to-use UITableViewCell subclass that implements a swipeable content view which exposes utility buttons (similar to iOS 7 Mail Application)

##Functionality ###Right Utility Buttons Utility buttons that become visible on the right side of the Table View Cell when the user swipes left. This behavior is similar to that seen in the iOS apps Mail and Reminders.

###Left Utility Buttons Utility buttons that become visible on the left side of the Table View Cell when the user swipes right.

###Features

  • Dynamic utility button scalling. As you add more buttons to a cell, the other buttons on that side get smaller to make room
  • Smart selection: The cell will pick up touch events and either scroll the cell back to center or fire the delegate method - (void)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView didSelectRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath

So the cell will not be considered selected when the user touches the cell while utility buttons are visible, instead the cell will slide back into place (same as iOS 7 Mail App functionality) * Create utilty buttons with either a title or an icon along with a RGB color * Tested on iOS 6.1 and above, including iOS 7

##Usage

###Standard Table View Cells

In your tableView:cellForRowAtIndexPath: method you set up the SWTableView cell and add an arbitrary amount of utility buttons to it using the included NSMutableArray+SWUtilityButtons category.

- (UITableViewCell *)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView cellForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
    static NSString *cellIdentifier = @"Cell";
    
    SWTableViewCell *cell = (SWTableViewCell *)[tableView dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier:cellIdentifier];
    
    if (cell == nil) {
        NSMutableArray *leftUtilityButtons = [NSMutableArray new];
        NSMutableArray *rightUtilityButtons = [NSMutableArray new];
        
        [leftUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                        [UIColor colorWithRed:0.07 green:0.75f blue:0.16f alpha:1.0] 
                        icon:[UIImage imageNamed:@"check.png"]];
        [leftUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                        [UIColor colorWithRed:1.0f green:1.0f blue:0.35f alpha:1.0] 
                        icon:[UIImage imageNamed:@"clock.png"]];
        [leftUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                        [UIColor colorWithRed:1.0f green:0.231f blue:0.188f alpha:1.0] 
                        icon:[UIImage imageNamed:@"cross.png"]];
        [leftUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                        [UIColor colorWithRed:0.55f green:0.27f blue:0.07f alpha:1.0] 
                        icon:[UIImage imageNamed:@"list.png"]];
        
        [rightUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                        [UIColor colorWithRed:0.78f green:0.78f blue:0.8f alpha:1.0]
                        title:@"More"];
        [rightUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                        [UIColor colorWithRed:1.0f green:0.231f blue:0.188 alpha:1.0f] 
                            title:@"Delete"];
        
        cell = [[SWTableViewCell alloc] initWithStyle:UITableViewCellStyleSubtitle 
                        reuseIdentifier:cellIdentifier 
                        containingTableView:_tableView // For row height and selection
                        leftUtilityButtons:leftUtilityButtons 
                        rightUtilityButtons:rightUtilityButtons];
        cell.delegate = self;
    }
    
    NSDate *dateObject = _testArray[indexPath.row];
    cell.textLabel.text = [dateObject description];
    cell.detailTextLabel.text = @"Some detail text";

return cell;
}

###Custom Table View Cells

Thanks to Matt Bowman you can now create custom table view cells using Interface Builder that have the capabilities of an SWTableViewCell

The first step is to design your cell either in a standalone nib or inside of a table view using prototype cells. Make sure to set the custom class on the cell in interface builder to the subclass you made for it:

Then set the cell reuse identifier:

When writing your custom table view cell's code, make sure your cell is a subclass of SWTableViewCell:

#import <SWTableViewCell.h>

@interface MyCustomTableViewCell : SWTableViewCell

@property (weak, nonatomic) UILabel *customLabel;
@property (weak, nonatomic) UIImageView *customImageView;

@end

If you are using a separate nib and not a prototype cell, you'll need to be sure to register the nib in your table view:

- (void)viewDidLoad
{
    [super viewDidLoad];

    [self.tableView registerNib:[UINib nibWithNibName:@"MyCustomTableViewCellNibFileName" bundle:nil] forCellReuseIdentifier:@"MyCustomCell"];
}

Then, in the tableView:cellForRowAtIndexPath: method of your UITableViewDelegate (usually your view controller), initialize your custom cell:

- (UITableViewCell*)tableView:(UITableView*)tableView cellForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath*)indexPath
{
    static NSString *cellIdentifier = @"MyCustomCell";
    
    MyCustomTableViewCell *cell = (MyCustomTableViewCell *)[tableView dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier:cellIdentifier 
                                                                                           forIndexPath:indexPath];
    
    cell.customLabel.text = @"Some Text";
    cell.customImageView.image = [UIImage imageNamed:@"MyAwesomeTableCellImage"];
    cell.containingTableView = tableView;
    [cell setCellHeight:cell.frame.size.height];

    NSMutableArray *leftUtilityButtons = [NSMutableArray new];
    NSMutableArray *rightUtilityButtons = [NSMutableArray new];
    
    [leftUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                    [UIColor colorWithRed:0.07 green:0.75f blue:0.16f alpha:1.0] 
                    icon:[UIImage imageNamed:@"check.png"]];
    [leftUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                    [UIColor colorWithRed:1.0f green:1.0f blue:0.35f alpha:1.0] 
                    icon:[UIImage imageNamed:@"clock.png"]];
    [leftUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                    [UIColor colorWithRed:1.0f green:0.231f blue:0.188f alpha:1.0] 
                    icon:[UIImage imageNamed:@"cross.png"]];
    [leftUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                    [UIColor colorWithRed:0.55f green:0.27f blue:0.07f alpha:1.0] 
                    icon:[UIImage imageNamed:@"list.png"]];
    
    [rightUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                    [UIColor colorWithRed:0.78f green:0.78f blue:0.8f alpha:1.0]
                    title:@"More"];
    [rightUtilityButtons sw_addUtilityButtonWithColor:
                    [UIColor colorWithRed:1.0f green:0.231f blue:0.188 alpha:1.0f] 
                        title:@"Delete"];

    cell.leftUtilityButtons = leftUtilityButtons;
    cell.rightUtilityButtons = rightUtilityButtons;
    
    cell.delegate = self;

    return cell;
}

###Delegate

The delegate SWTableViewCellDelegate is used by the developer to find out which button was pressed. There are two methods:

- (void)swipeableTableViewCell:(SWTableViewCell *)cell didTriggerLeftUtilityButtonWithIndex:(NSInteger)index;
- (void)swipeableTableViewCell:(SWTableViewCell *)cell didTriggerRightUtilityButtonWithIndex:(NSInteger)index;

The index signifies which utility button the user pressed, for each side the button indices are ordered from right to left 0...n

####Example

#pragma mark - SWTableViewDelegate

- (void)swipeableTableViewCell:(SWTableViewCell *)cell didTriggerLeftUtilityButtonWithIndex:(NSInteger)index {
    switch (index) {
        case 0:
            NSLog(@"check button was pressed");
            break;
        case 1:
            NSLog(@"clock button was pressed");
            break;
        case 2:
            NSLog(@"cross button was pressed");
            break;
        case 3:
            NSLog(@"list button was pressed");
        default:
            break;
    }
}

- (void)swipeableTableViewCell:(SWTableViewCell *)cell didTriggerRightUtilityButtonWithIndex:(NSInteger)index {
    switch (index) {
        case 0:
            NSLog(@"More button was pressed");
            break;
        case 1:
        {
            // Delete button was pressed
            NSIndexPath *cellIndexPath = [self.tableView indexPathForCell:cell];
            
            [_testArray removeObjectAtIndex:cellIndexPath.row];
            [self.tableView deleteRowsAtIndexPaths:@[cellIndexPath] 
                    withRowAnimation:UITableViewRowAnimationAutomatic];
            break;
        }
        default:
            break;
    }
}

(This is all code from the included example project)

###Gotchas

Custom UITableViewCell content

  • Accessing view of the cell object or managing the predefined content still works fine. So for example if you change the cell's imageView or backgroundView, SWTableViewCell will still work as expected
  • Don't use accessory views in your cell, because they live above the contentView and will stay in place when the cell scrolls.

Seperator Insets

  • If you have left utility button on iOS 7, I recommend changing your Table View's seperatorInset so the seperator stretches the length of the screen
 tableView.separatorInset = UIEdgeInsetsMake(0, 0, 0, 0); 

##Contributing Use Github issues to track bugs and feature requests.

I'm really busy in college and not actively working on this, so pull requests would be greatly appreciated.

##Contact

Chris Wendel

Licence

MIT

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An easy-to-use UITableViewCell subclass that implements a swippable content view which exposes utility buttons (similar to iOS 7 Mail Application)

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