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touchesEnded not being called??? or randomly being called

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-28 04:50 出处:网络
If I lift my finger up off the first touch, then it will recognize the开发者_StackOverflow中文版 next touch just fine.It\'s only when I hold my first touch down continuously and then try and touch a d

If I lift my finger up off the first touch, then it will recognize the开发者_StackOverflow中文版 next touch just fine. It's only when I hold my first touch down continuously and then try and touch a different area with a different finger at the same time. It will then incorrectly register that second touch as being from the first touch again.

Update It has something to do with touchesEnded not being called until the very LAST touch has ended (it doesn't care if you already had 5 other touches end before you finally let go of the last one... it calls them all to end once the very last touch ends)

- (void)touchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {

 UITouch* touch = [touches anyObject];

 NSString* filename = [listOfStuff objectAtIndex:[touch view].tag];

// do something with the filename now

}

- (void)touchesEnded:(NSSet *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {

 ITouch* touch = [touches anyObject];
 NSString* buttonPressed = [listOfStuff objectAtIndex:[touch view].tag];

 // do something with this info now
}


I had this today, (or rather I had this problem dumped on me today!).

What I saw happening:

  • Touch Screen With Finger 1
  • touchesBegan fires
  • Touch Screen With Finger 2
  • touchesBegan fires
  • Release Finger 2
  • nothing happens
  • Release Finger 1
  • touchesEnded fires
  • touchesEnded fires

As Gavin Clifton said, it only happens if you add a gesture recognizer. Without a recognizer added, touchesEnded fires after each finger is released. Which would be great if I didn't need to use recognizers...!!!

I solved this by adding gestureRotation.delaysTouchesEnded = FALSE; to my recognizer creation/adding code:

gestureRotation = [[UIRotationGestureRecognizer alloc] initWithTarget:self action:@selector(gestureRotation_Callback:)];

[gestureRotation setDelegate:self];
gestureRotation.cancelsTouchesInView = FALSE;
gestureRotation.delaysTouchesEnded = FALSE;        // <---- this line!!
[self.view addGestureRecognizer: gestureRotation];
[gestureRotation release];

Now the gestures work, and touchesBegan no longer queues!


For whatever reason, touchesEnded is being delayed only when the touch is within the scrollview. If you either a) disable the scrollview from scrolling; or b) don't use a scrollview, then touchesEnded gets delivered right away.

I have heard where some people have intercepted sendEvent, but that seems sketchy to me and I really don't want to screw up the responder chain since sendEvent handles an awful lot of events.

Any additional thoughts? Has anyone ever subclassed UIWindow to try and intercept the touches that way? Any input you could provide is appreciated.


The scrollview has a property delaysContentTouches which is set to YES by default. It will delay all touch events until it determines a scrolling gesture.


I know this question is a bit old but I thought I'd share my experience for anyone who stumbles across this thread looking for an answer, like I just have.

I've been struggling with this problem for a few hours and the only solution I could come up with was to remove any UIGestureRecognizer objects that I was using.

For my setup I was using pan and tap recognizers to capture those gestures, and using touchesBegan and touchesEnded for any standard touch events. It wasn't until I removed the UIGestureRecognizer objects that the touchesEnded method started getting called again for the second touch ending. Specifically it was the pan recognizer that was causing the issues.

I'm not totally sure if this applies in this case but it solved the issues I was having.


Set multipleTouchEnabled.

In Interface Builder, it's the "Multiple Touch" checkbox under "User Interaction Enabled."


I just had this problem, where a touchesEnded would never be called on a button within a ScrollView. Based on Ovidiu's answer, I discovered that manually setting the ContentOffset of my ScrollView was causing the problem. Presumably having the contentOffset set the way I had it was confusing the ScrollView as to whether I was trying to press the button or scroll the view.

Letting the offset stay at 0,0 made the problem go away.


I found another option.

After touchesBegan and CGPoint not moved according to touchesMoved, touchesCancelled called.

However, If CGPoint changed according to touchesMoved, touchesEnded called.

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