Oops about the off list. I ended up just doing an Init with frame and then
brought existing storyboard views up in the view hierarchy. The only reason I
wanted to assign the class to an existing view on the storyboard was because I
could ensure the z-order visually.
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On Tu
On Oct 6, 2015, at 16:48 , Eric Dolecki wrote:
>
> I had a UI view on the storyboard and set its class to my custom UI view
> class. Init with coder fired and I set my UI from there. However doing so
> produced dead controls. Does one need to call a method to get around that
> problem?
(you
On Oct 6, 2015, at 13:25 , Eric E. Dolecki wrote:
>
> Off-screen I have a custom UIView that has a UIScrollView in it.
What’s the parent view of the custom view? If it’s not in the view hierarchy
underneath the UIWindow, then it’s not going to get any events.
__
I have a Storyboard - UIView with view controller - simple UITableView in
it wth some UIScrollViews in cells. Works great.
Off-screen I have a custom UIView that has a UIScrollView in it. Upon a
button press, I animate it over the main view. It receives no events - the
UIScrollView in the top view