I have custom cell having switch in few cells at right side. what I want is to store value of specific cell on switch change event. Table view has number sections so I can\'
In your custom cell add properties which help you identify the information the cell represents. Index path, indexes for your data model etc...
Then add a block property to the cell which you can call to tell a UITableView or any other piece of code when a cell switch changes. e.g.
@property (nonatomic,copy) void (^onSwitchChange)(UITableViewCell *cell);
Inside your custom cell code, add an action handler for the UISwitch. When it fires, call self.onSwitchChange(self) which will notify the code which registered an onSwitchChange block that a switch has changed and on which cell.
In your table view when you create the cell, set the onSwitchChange block as follows:
- (UITableViewCell *)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView cellForRowAtIndexPath (NSIndexPath *)indexPath
{
<snip>
YourUITableViewCell *cell = [tableView dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier:yourCellIdentifier forIndexPath:indexPath];
cell.onSwitchChange=^(UITableViewCell *cellAffected){
// Add code to deal with the swicth switch using properties of cellAffected
... Your handler code here ...
}];
<snip>
}
This lets you handle all the changes in the table view controller. Hope this helps.
The answer from @Jageen works. I had to find out which superview the cell is, mine was one more level higher.
UITableViewCell *cell = (UITableViewCell*)[sender superview].superview.superview;
NSIndexPath *indexPath = [self.myTableView indexPathForCell:cell];
NSLog(@"Section %ld Row : %ld",(long)indexPath.section,(long)indexPath.row); // print row section and index
You can still create tags even if you have sections if you have some idea of about max rows in a largest section. For example if you think there will be 1000 rows in a section then you can create tag using following formula.
tag = section * 1000 + row;
later in your IBAction of switch you can find out the indexpath (section and row) using following:
section = tag/1000;
row = tag%1000;
If you have no idea of how many rows your section will have you can find out the cell using sender.superview.superview
(be careful if have added any other views in hierarchy).
Rory McKinnel's answer is still the cleanest solution for your problem.