SVPullToRefresh allows you to easily add pull-to-refresh functionality to any UIScrollView
subclass with only 1 line of code. Instead of depending on delegates and/or subclassing UIViewController
, SVPullToRefresh extends UIScrollView
with a addPullToRefreshWithActionHandler:
method as well as a pullToRefreshView
property.
Only add pull-to-refresh functionality to your app if it makes sense! Pull to refresh is only appropriate if the pull down gesture is also the one that is used to browse your scroll view. In most cases, pull-to-refresh only makes sense for chronologically-sorted lists of items.
- Drag the
SVPullToRefresh/SVPullToRefresh
folder into your project. - Add the QuartzCore framework to your project.
#import "SVPullToRefresh.h"
(see sample Xcode project in /Demo
)
Adding pull-to-refresh to a table view can be done with one single line of code:
[tableView addPullToRefreshWithActionHandler:^{ // refresh data // call [tableView.pullToRefreshView stopAnimating] when done }];
The SVPullToRefresh view can be customized with the following properties:
@property (nonatomic, strong) UIColor *arrowColor; @property (nonatomic, strong) UIColor *textColor; @property (nonatomic, readwrite) UIActivityIndicatorViewStyle activityIndicatorViewStyle;
You can access these properties through your scroll view’s pullToRefreshView
property. For instance, you would set the arrowColor
property using:
tableView.pullToRefreshView.arrowColor = [UIColor whiteColor];
SVPullToRefresh extends UIScrollView
by adding a new public method as well as a dynamic property (thanks @seb_morel!). It uses key-value observing to track the scrollView’s contentOffset
, which removes the need for the view to be linked to the UIScrollViewDelegate
protocol.
SVPullToRefresh is brought to you by Sam Vermette and contributors to the project. If you have feature suggestions or bug reports, feel free to help out by sending pull requests or by creating new issues. If you’re using SVPullToRefresh in your project, attribution would be nice.
Big thanks to @seb_morel for his Demistifying the Objective-C runtime talk, which permitted the level of abstraction found in SVPullToRefresh.
Hat tip to Loren Brichter for inventing such a great UI mechanism.