I realize that this is the inverse of most posts, but I would like for the keyboard to remain up even if the 'keyboard down' button is pressed.
Specifically, I have a view with two UITextField
s. With the following delegate method
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldReturn:(UITextField *)textField {
return NO;
}
I am able to keep the keyboard up even if the user presses the Done
button on the keyboard or taps anywhere else on the screen EXCEPT for that pesky keyboard down button on the bottom right of the keyboard.
I am using this view like a modal view (though the view is associated with a ViewController that gets pushed in a UINavigationController), so it really works best from a user perspective to keep the keyboard up all of the time. If anyone knows how to achieve this, please let me know! Thanks!
UPDATE Still no solution! When Done
is pressed, it triggers textFieldShouldReturn
, but when the Dismiss
button is pressed, it triggers textFieldDidEndEditing
. I cannot block the textField
from ending editing or it never goes away. Somehow, I really want to have a method that detects the Dismiss
button and ignores it. If you know a way, please enlighten me!
There IS a way to do this. Because
UIKeyboard
subclassesUIWindow
, the only thing big enough to get inUIKeyboard
's way is anotherUIWindow
.This works on iPhone apps. Haven't tried it with iPad. You may need to adjust the size of
myWindow
. Also, I didn't do any mem management onmyWindow
. So, consider doing that, too.Old not perfect solution
I can only think of a not perfect solution. Listen for the notification
UIKeyboardDidHideNotification
and make of the textfields first responder again. This will move the keyboard out of sight and back again. You could keep record of which textfield was the last firstResponder by listening for UIKeyboardWillHideNotification and put focus on it in the didHide.Try adding a custom on top of the keyboard dismiss button so that the user won't be able to tab the dismiss button. I have used this method in one of my application.
For iOS 9/10 and Swift 3, use this to create a rect which overlaps the "Hide keyboard" - Button
Notice that this adds a sub view to the keyboard window instead of the main window
Try this...
You can use notification as mentioned by Nick Weaver.
I think I've found a good solution.
Add a BOOL as instance variable, let's call it
shouldBeginCalledBeforeHand
Then implement the following methods:
As well as
to prevent the keyboard from disappearing with the return button. The trick is, a focus switch from one textfield to another will trigger a textFieldShouldBeginEditing beforehand. If the dismiss keyboard button is pressed this doesn't happen. The flag is reset after a textfield has gotten focus.