The following code (called in viewDidLoad) results in a fully red screen. I would expect it to be a fully green screen. Why is it red? And how can I make it all green?
UIScrollView* scrollView = [UIScrollView new];
scrollView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = NO;
scrollView.backgroundColor = [UIColor redColor];
[self.view addSubview:scrollView];
UIView* contentView = [UIView new];
contentView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = NO;
contentView.backgroundColor = [UIColor greenColor];
[scrollView addSubview:contentView];
NSDictionary* viewDict = NSDictionaryOfVariableBindings(scrollView,contentView);
[self.view addConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"H:|[scrollView]|" options:0 metrics:0 views:viewDict]];
[self.view addConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"V:|[scrollView]|" options:0 metrics:0 views:viewDict]];
[scrollView addConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"H:|[contentView]|" options:0 metrics:0 views:viewDict]];
[scrollView addConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"V:|[contentView]|" options:0 metrics:0 views:viewDict]];
I tried Rob's answer looks fine at first. BUT! if you also enabled zooming, this Autolayout code will get in the way. It keeps resizing the contentView when zooms. That is, if I zoomed in (zoomScale > 1), I won't be able to scroll the the parts outside the screen.
After days of fighting with Autolayout, sadly I couldn't find any solution. In the end, it doesn't even matter (wat? ok, sorry). In the end, I just remove Autolayout on contentView (use a fixed size contentView), and then in layoutSubviews, I adjust the
self.scrollView.contentInset
. (I'm using Xcode5, iOS 7)I know this is not a direct solution to this question. But I just want to point out an easy workaround. It works perfectly for centering a fixed-size contentView in a scrollView, with just 2 lines of code! Hope it may help someone ;)
In general, Auto Layout considers the top, left, bottom, and right edges of a view to be the visible edges. That is, if you pin a view to the left edge of its superview, you’re really pinning it to the minimum x-value of the superview’s bounds. Changing the bounds origin of the superview does not change the position of the view.
The UIScrollView class scrolls its content by changing the origin of its bounds. To make this work with Auto Layout, the top, left, bottom, and right edges within a scroll view now mean the edges of its content view.
The constraints on the subviews of the scroll view must result in a size to fill, which is then interpreted as the content size of the scroll view. (This should not be confused with the intrinsicContentSize method used for Auto Layout.) To size the scroll view’s frame with Auto Layout, constraints must either be explicit regarding the width and height of the scroll view, or the edges of the scroll view must be tied to views outside of its subtree.
Note that you can make a subview of the scroll view appear to float (not scroll) over the other scrolling content by creating constraints between the view and a view outside the scroll view’s subtree, such as the scroll view’s superview.
Here are two examples of how to configure the scroll view, first the mixed approach, and then the pure approach
Constraints with scroll views work slightly differently than it does with other views. The constraints between of
contentView
and itssuperview
(thescrollView
) are to thescrollView
'scontentSize
, not to itsframe
. This might seem confusing, but it is actually quite useful, meaning that you never have to adjust thecontentSize
, but rather thecontentSize
will automatically adjust to fit your content. This behavior is described in Technical Note TN2154.If you want to define the
contentView
size to the screen or something like that, you'd have to add a constraint between thecontentView
and the main view, for example. That's, admittedly, antithetical to putting content into the scrollview, so I probably wouldn't advise that, but it can be done.To illustrate this concept, that the size of
contentView
will be driven by its content, not by thebounds
of thescrollView
, add a label to yourcontentView
:Now you'll see that the
contentView
(and, therefore, thecontentSize
of thescrollView
) are adjusted to fit the label with standard margins. And because I didn't specify the width/height of the label, that will adjust based upon the text you put into that label.If you want the
contentView
to also adjust to the width of the main view, you could do redefine yourviewDict
like so, and then add these additional constraints (in addition to all the others, above):There is a known issue (bug?) with multiline labels in scrollviews, that if you want it to resize according to the amount of text, you have to do some sleight of hand, such as: