If I want to handle changes to a UITextField, such as the user typing in it; it seems like this can be done either by assigning a delegate to that text field, and then having th
One key difference I've found between the two approaches posed in the original question is that the delegate "shouldChangeCharactersInRange"
gets called BEFORE the value in the UITextField
changes. The target for UIControlEventEditingChanged
gets called AFTER the value in the UITextField
changes.
In the case that you're using these events to make sure (for example) that all fields in a dialog are completely filled in before enabling a "Done" button, the target approach may work better for you. It did for me.
The delegation approach is the way to homogenize UITextField
and UITextView
behavior.
UITextView
does not have control events. In contrast, UITextFieldDelegate
and UITextviewDelegate
provide parallel methods.
shouldChangeCharactersInRange
is called before a change occurs, and gives you opportunity to 'cancel' the change. UIControlEventEditingChanged
is called after the change occurred.
You can determine the resulting value of the textField in shouldChangeCharactersInRange
, but you have to manually apply the replacementString to the existing text, using the supplied range. (via NSString stringByReplacingCharactersInRange
). If you want to know the resulting text, it's easier and more efficient to use UIControlEventEditingChanged
.
shouldChangeCharactersInRange
is often used to implement validation checking of input - that is, you can filter characters/pasted text as it is entered. If a field is for phone numbers, for example, you can return FALSE
if the user types a non numeric character, or attempts to paste in text that isn't numeric.
You might find a case where you can reuse code for multiple controls if you can stick with the UIControlEvent-methods.
I have found out that shouldChangeCharactersInRange
passes the same NSRange
for insertion and deletion of text. You append a space and then delete it, and the parameters from shouldChangeCharactersInRange
are indistinguishable from duplication of the text.
So shouldChangeCharactersInRange
actually cannot predict the resulting text.
You're right; you can essentially do the same thing via both, but UIControl is lower level and lets you siphon off each particular UIEvent to different targets via [UIControl addTarget:action:forControlEvents:]
where as there is only a single delegate.
I would also say that the UITextField delegate protocol is simply there as a more convenient, higher level alternative to UIControl/UIEvent as a way to manage the behaviour of a UITextField.
The most common delegate pattern is UITableView DataSource and Delegate and I would say that using the UITextField delegate protocol is quite similar and therefore looks far more straight forward with more defined intentions than handing the messages from UIControl directly.