9

I have given a tableview cell a color on selection in cellForRowAtIndexPath using

    let backgroundView = UIView()
    backgroundView.backgroundColor = UIColor.grey3 //custom color
    cell.selectedBackgroundView = backgroundView

Since I am building with Xcode 11.0 the color is not propagated to the subviews of the cell anymore on an iOS 13 device or Simulator. If I build on an iOS 12.2 simulator using Xcode 11.0 it still works.

Anyone has an idea what has changed to cause this behaviour? I am working with .xib files.

Samuël
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3 Answers3

8

From Apple's iOS 13 Release Notes:

The UITableViewCell class no longer changes the backgroundColor or isOpaque properties of the contentView and any of its subviews when cells become highlighted or selected. If you are setting an opaque backgroundColor on any subviews of the cell inside (and including) the contentView, the appearance when the cell becomes highlighted or selected might be affected. The simplest way to resolve any issues with your subviews is to ensure their backgroundColor is set to nil or clear, and their opaque property is false. However, if needed you can override the setHighlighted(:animated:) and setSelected(:animated:) methods to manually change these properties on your subviews when moving to or from the highlighted and selected states.

My quick test confirms this would be the cause in your case.

Cell with green-background label, orange view as .selectedBackgroundView.

iOS 12:

enter image description here

iOS 13:

enter image description here

DonMag
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5

If you use the hierarchy debugger, you'll see that in iOS 13 the contentView sits above the backgroundView and selectedBackgroundView.

This can be resolved by setting

contentView.backgroundColor = nil 

in awakeFromNib

or setting the contentView's backgroundColour to clear in the storyboard

Ashley Mills
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3

I had the same problem, my solutions is:

TableViewController:

override func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, cellForRowAt indexPath: IndexPath) -> UITableViewCell {

    let cell = tableView.dequeueReusableCell(withIdentifier: "testCell")! as! TestCell

    // Turn off selection style for iOS12, iOS11, etc...  
    cell.selectionStyle = .none

    return cell
}

Cell Class (I have a UIView inside cell's ContentView):

class TestCell: UITableViewCell {

    @IBOutlet weak var testCellBackgroundView: UIView!

    override func setSelected(_ selected: Bool, animated: Bool) {
        super.setSelected(selected, animated: animated)

        if selected {
            contentView.backgroundColor = UIColor.white
            testCellBackgroundView.backgroundColor = UIColor.red
        } else { 
            contentView.backgroundColor = UIColor.white
            testCellBackgroundView.backgroundColor = UIColor.green // default background color
        }
    }

    // You may change highlighted color of a cell the same way
    override func setHighlighted(_ highlighted: Bool, animated: Bool) {
        super.setHighlighted(highlighted, animated: animated)

        if highlighted {
            contentView.backgroundColor = UIColor.white
            testCellBackgroundView.backgroundColor = UIColor.red
        } else {
            contentView.backgroundColor = UIColor.white
            testCellBackgroundView.backgroundColor = UIColor.green
        }
    }   
}

Note: this is my first answer at stackoverflow, please check if it's correct.

feheradi
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