Expand UILabel inside UITableView with “more” butt

2019-01-08 00:37发布

I've got a project (that has been written by other people) where there's a feed with content and text displayed inside a table view. Each post corresponds to one section in table view, and each section has its own rows corresponding to elements like content, text, like button etc.

I need to display a short label for post captions with a "more" button inside table view cell, and when more button is tapped, the label will expand to whatever size the caption fits, all happening inside a table view cell. When the more button is tapped I change the label's numberOfLines property to zero, and as the cells have automatic height, all I need is to reload that particular caption cell. (the cell displays correctly with the expanded size if I set numberOfLines to 0 at the first place before displaying the cell.)

I've tried:

[tableView beginUpdates]; tableView endUpdates];

I've tried various animation options with:

[tableView reloadRowsAtIndexPaths:@[myPath] withRowAnimation:UITableViewRowAnimation(Bottom,Top,None etc)];

I've tried:

[tableView reloadSections:[NSIndexSet indexSetWithIndex:myPath.section] withRowAnimation:UITableViewRowAnimation(Top,Bottom,None etc)];

But they all yield the same result: the whole table view layout gets messed up: it jumps to another cell, some views go blank, cells overlap each other, video inside cells stop playing, and the label doesn't expand (but refreshes inside itself, e.g. that short preview txt with one line animates from top/bottom etc but doesn't expand).

What might be causing the mess up of the whole table view and how I can reload just one cell correctly with and expansion animation, without messing up the whole layout? I've seen many questions and answers regarding this, but they all recommend the options that I've already tried and explained above.

My app targets iOS 8.0+

UPDATE: Here is the relevant code (with some parts regarding inner workings that aren't related to layout, removed):

MyCell *cell = (MyCell *)[tableView dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier: MyCellIdentifier forIndexPath:indexPath];
cell.delegate = self;
cell.indexPathToReloadOnAnimation = indexPath;
cell.shouldShortenCaption = YES;

id post = self.posts[indexPath.section] ;
[cell setPost:post];

return cell;

And inside setPost::

if(self.shouldShortenCaption){
    captionLabel.numberOfLines = 2;
}else{
    captionLabel.numberOfLines = 0;
}
NSString *text = [some calculated (deterministic) text from post object];

Button action is simple:

self.shouldShortenCaption = NO;
[one of the reload codes that I've written above in the question]

UPDATE 2: Here are some more methods regarding the issue:

- (CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForHeaderInSection:(NSInteger)section {
    if (section < self.posts.count) {
        return 59;
    }else
        return 0;
}

- (UIView *)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView viewForHeaderInSection:(NSInteger)section {
    if (section < self.posts.count) {
        MyFeedHeader *header = [tableView dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier:MyFeedHeaderIdentifier];
        header.delegate = self;
        [header setPostIndex:section];
        [header setPost:self.posts[section]] ;

        return header;
    }
    else
        return nil;
}

Header's setPost: method basically sets the relevant texts to labels (which have nothing to do with the caption, they are completely different cells. the problematic cell is not the header cell). The table doesn't have any footer methods. The only method regarding height is the one above.

- (NSInteger)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView numberOfRowsInSection:(NSInteger)section {
    if (section >= self.posts.count) {
        return 1;
    }
    id post = self.posts[section];
    [calculate number of rows, which is deterministic]
    return [number of rows];
}

- (NSInteger)numberOfSectionsInTableView:(UITableView *)tableView {
    BOOL hasCursor = self.cursor && self.hasMore ? 1 : 0;
    return self.posts.count + hasCursor;
}

(Post count and cursor and hasMore are also deterministic).

UPDATE 3: I've asked a question (which wasn't a duplicate, even though there are similar questions) and got a useful answer that solved my problem. Can the downvoters please elaborate the reason that they've downvoted?

1条回答
祖国的老花朵
2楼-- · 2019-01-08 00:42

Here is an example: https://github.com/DonMag/DynamicCellHeight

Table B is one way of accomplishing "More/Less" (Table A was for another layout I played around with). It uses the [tableView beginUpdates]; tableView endUpdates]; method of triggering the table re-layout.

The key is getting all your constraints set up correctly, so the Auto-Layout engine does what you expect.

The example is in Swift, but should be really easily translated back to Obj-C (I think I did it in Obj-C first).

enter image description here

Edit: some additional notes...

This is using a pretty standard method of dynamic-height table view cells. The vertical spacing constraints between elements effectively "pushes out" the bounds of the cell. The tap here toggles the numberOfLines property of the label between 2 and 0 (zero meaning as many lines as necessary). Sequential calls to beginUpdates / endUpdates on the table view tells the auto-layout engine to recalculate the row heights without needing to reload the data.

For this example, I did use a little "trickery" to get the smooth expand/collapse effect... The multiline label you see here is contained in a UIView (with clipsToBounds true). There is a second, duplicate multiline label (alpha 0 so it's not visible) that is controlling the height. I found that changing the numberOfLines on the visible label sort of "snapped" to 2 lines, and then the size change animation took place... resulting in the text "jumping around."

Just for the heck of it, I added the "not so good" version to my GitHub repo for comparison's sake.

enter image description here

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