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MCSwipeTableViewCell

An Effort to show how one would implement a TableViewCell like the one we can see in the very well executed Mailbox iOS app.

##Demo ###Exit Mode The exit mode (MCSwipeTableViewCellModeExit) is the original behavior we can see in the Mailboxapp. Swiping the cell should make it disappear.

###Switch Mode The switch mode (MCSwipeTableViewCellModeSwitch) is a new behavior I'm introducing. The cell will bounce back after selecting a state, this allows you to keep the cell. Very useful to switch an option quickly.

##Usage

- (UITableViewCell *)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView cellForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath
{
    static NSString *CellIdentifier = @"Cell";
        
    MCSwipeTableViewCell *cell = [tableView dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier:CellIdentifier];
    
    if (!cell)
    {
        cell = [[MCSwipeTableViewCell alloc] initWithStyle:UITableViewCellStyleSubtitle reuseIdentifier:CellIdentifier];
    }
    
    // For the delegate callback
    [cell setDelegate:self];
    
    // We need to provide the icon names and the desired colors
    [cell setFirstStateIconName:@"check.png"
                     firstColor:[UIColor colorWithRed:85.0/255.0 green:213.0/255.0 blue:80.0/255.0 alpha:1.0]
            secondStateIconName:@"cross.png"
                    secondColor:[UIColor colorWithRed:232.0/255.0 green:61.0/255.0 blue:14.0/255.0 alpha:1.0]
                  thirdIconName:@"clock.png"
                     thirdColor:[UIColor colorWithRed:254.0/255.0 green:217.0/255.0 blue:56.0/255.0 alpha:1.0]
                 fourthIconName:@"list.png"
                    fourthColor:[UIColor colorWithRed:206.0/255.0 green:149.0/255.0 blue:98.0/255.0 alpha:1.0]];
    
    // We need to set a background to the content view of the cell
    [cell.contentView setBackgroundColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
    
    // Setting the type of the cell
	[cell setMode:MCSwipeTableViewCellModeExit];
    
    return cell;
}	

###Delegate

MCSwipeTableViewCell has a delegate to retrieve the cell/state/mode of the triggered item.

@interface MCTableViewController () <MCSwipeTableViewCellDelegate>
#pragma mark - MCSwipeTableViewCellDelegate

- (void)swipeTableViewCell:(MCSwipeTableViewCell *)cell didTriggerState:(MCSwipeTableViewCellState)state withMode:(MCSwipeTableViewCellMode)mode
{
    NSLog(@"IndexPath : %@ - MCSwipeTableViewCellState : %d - MCSwipeTableViewCellMode : %d", [self.tableView indexPathForCell:cell], state, mode);
}

###Deleting cells in Exit mode In MCSwipeTableViewCellModeExit mode you may want to delete the cell with a nice fading animation, the following lines will give you an idea how to execute it:

- (void)swipeTableViewCell:(MCSwipeTableViewCell *)cell didTriggerState:(MCSwipeTableViewCellState)state withMode:(MCSwipeTableViewCellMode)mode
{    
    if (mode == MCSwipeTableViewCellModeExit)
    {
		// Remove the item in your data array and then remove it with the following method
        [self.tableView deleteRowsAtIndexPaths:@[[self.tableView indexPathForCell:cell]] withRowAnimation:UITableViewRowAnimationFade];
    }
}

There is also an example in the demo project, I recommend to take a look at it.

###Customization You may want to change the number of states, have a color without the icon or the opposite. All those combinations are possible.

In setFirstStateIconName: method you just need to put a nil in the required fields to disable a state, remove the color or the icon.

For instance if you only want to have two states out of four:

[cell setFirstStateIconName:@"check.png"
				 firstColor:[UIColor colorWithRed:85.0/255.0 green:213.0/255.0 blue:80.0/255.0 alpha:1.0]
		secondStateIconName:@"cross.png"
				secondColor:[UIColor colorWithRed:232.0/255.0 green:61.0/255.0 blue:14.0/255.0 alpha:1.0]
			  thirdIconName:nil
				 thirdColor:nil
			 fourthIconName:nil
				fourthColor:nil];

##Requirements

  • iOS >= 5.0
  • ARC

Contact

Ali Karagoz

License

MCSwipeTableViewCell is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.

About

MCSwipeTableViewCell implements the gestural table view cell style seen in the very well-executed Mailbox iOS app.

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