I am using UICollectionView
to display photos in sections. Each section has a supplementary view as a header and is supplied via the method: viewForSupplementaryElementOfKind
.
I have a scrubber on the side that allows the user to jump from section to section. For now I am scrolling to the first item in the section using scrollToItemAtIndexPath:atScrollPosition:animated:
, but what I really want is to scroll the collectionView so that that section's header is at the top of the screen, not the first cell. I do not see an obvious method to do this with. Do any of you have a work around?
I suppose I could scroll to the first item of the section, and then offset that by the supplementary height plus the offset between the items and header if it comes down to that (there is a method for scrolling to point coordinates of the contentView). However if there is a simpler way, I'd like to know.
Thanks.
Solution in Swift,
Props to Gene De Lisa: http://www.rockhoppertech.com/blog/scroll-to-uicollectionview-header/
One thing the solutions don't manage is if you are pinning section headers. The methods work fine with unpinned headers, but if your headers are pinned, while scrolling to a section above the current section, it will stop once the section header appears (which will be for the bottom row of your section). That may be desirable in some cases but I think the goal is to put the top of the section at the top of the screen.
In which case you need to take the methods above and adjust them a bit. For instance:
Now you are basically scrolling the first row of your section to visible, less the height of its section header. This will put the section header on the top where you want it with pinned headers so the direction of the scroll won't matter anymore. I didn't test with section insets.
You can not use
scrollToItemAtIndexPath:atScrollPosition:animated
for this.Hopefully, they will add a new method like
scrollToSupplementaryElementOfKind:atIndexPath:
in the future, but for now, the only way is to manipulate the contentOffset directly.The code below shows how to scroll header to be on top vertically with FlowLayout. You can do the same for horizontal scrolling, or use this idea for other layout types.
Note that if you have non-zero
contentInset
(as in iOS 7, when scroll views expand below bars) you need to subtract it from theoffsetY
, as shown. Same forsectionInset
.Update:
The code assumes that the layout is in prepared, "valid" state because it uses it to calculate the offset. The layout is prepared when the collection view presents its content.
The call to
[_collectionView.collectionViewLayout prepareLayout]
before the code above may help when you need to scroll the collection view which is not yet presented (fromviewDidLoad
say). The call tolayoutIfNeeded
(as @Vrasidas suggested in comments) should work too because it also prepares the layout.