34

I thought when a view is touched or tapped on, its handler get called first, and then its superview's handler is called (propagate upward).

But is it true that if the superview's userInteractionEnabled is set to NO, then all subviews and offspring is also disabled for user interaction? What if we want to disable for just the main view but don't want to disable for the subviews?

nonopolarity
  • 146,324
  • 131
  • 460
  • 740
  • aha, I was wondering what rule or what mechanism of the UIResponder causes this... even though right now I memorize this as a "fact" – nonopolarity Jun 05 '12 at 06:30

4 Answers4

39

You can override hitTest(_:withEvent:) to ignore the view itself, but still deliver touches to its subviews.

class ContainerStackView : UIStackView {
    override func hitTest(_ point: CGPoint, with event: UIEvent?) -> UIView? {
        let result = super.hitTest(point, with: event)
        if result == self { return nil }
        return result
    }
}
Nikolay Suvandzhiev
  • 8,465
  • 6
  • 41
  • 47
Patrick Pijnappel
  • 7,317
  • 3
  • 39
  • 39
  • Very good. Solves a lot of problems. I used it to get an Navigation bar that's passes through touches without ignoring the buttons. I modified this to: "return result is UIControl ? result : nil" – heiko Nov 10 '21 at 09:25
  • Very good and clean solution. Works perfectly – Philipp Otto Jan 26 '22 at 16:04
29

If this may be helpful, I found this in Programming iOS 5 by Matt Neuburg, p. 467:

userInteractionEnabled

If set to NO, this view (along with its subviews) is excluded from receiving touches. Touches on this view or one of its subviews "fall through" to a view behind it.

Further more, Apple's Event Handling Guide for iOS says:

The window object uses hit-testing and the responder chain to find the view to receive the touch event. In hit-testing, a window calls hitTest:withEvent: on the top-most view of the view hierarchy; this method proceeds by recursively calling pointInside:withEvent: on each view in the view hierarchy that returns YES, proceeding down the hierarchy until it finds the subview within whose bounds the touch took place. That view becomes the hit-test view.

and Programming iOS 5 by Matt Neuburg, p.485 mentioned that if a view is marked userInteractionEnabled as NO, or hidden as YES, or opacity is close to 0, then the view and its subview will not be traversed by HitTest (and therefore not considered for any touch).

Updated: I suppose it also works this way if we think about parent-child situation in other scenario. For example, in HTML, if there is a div and there are children all under this div, and now this div is set to display: none, then it makes sense that all the children are not displayed as well. So if a parent is set to not interact with the user, it also makes sense that the children do not interact with the user as well.

nonopolarity
  • 146,324
  • 131
  • 460
  • 740
  • 1
    Excellent info for those people implementing their own `hitTest:withEvent:`. I wasn't sure whether I needed to check `if(subview.userInteractionEnabled)` at the superview level, but it appears the default implementation checks its own `userInteractionEnabled` property.' –  Aug 24 '12 at 05:56
  • what does "fall through" to a view behind it." mean? Does that mean tapping on buttons that are subviews won't work? – mfaani Oct 09 '17 at 16:51
17

You can't do that,

Instead you would change the arrangment of your views like following:

Main View -> subViews

To

Container View -> Main View that you want to set as inactive
               -> other views that you want to still be active

So your current main view and you current subviews will become siblings, children of a new container view

Iulian Onofrei
  • 9,188
  • 10
  • 67
  • 113
Omar Abdelhafith
  • 21,163
  • 5
  • 52
  • 56
3

First Method

- (BOOL) gestureRecognizer:(UIGestureRecognizer *)gestureRecognizer shouldReceiveTouch:(UITouch *)touch
{
  if ([touch.view.superview isKindOfClass:[SuperViewParent class]]) return FALSE;
  return TRUE;
}

Second Method

UITapGestureRecognizer *r = [[UITapGestureRecognizer alloc] initWithTarget:self action:@selector(agentPickerTapped:)];
    r.cancelsTouchesInView = NO;
    [agentPicker addGestureRecognizer:r];
Zar E Ahmer
  • 33,936
  • 20
  • 234
  • 300