Detect active NSSplitViewItem
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I have a SplitView with (several) SplitViewItems. Echt SplitViewItem has a ViewController with multiple views in it.
I need to detect which of the SplitViewItems has the focus of the user.
For example: if the user clicks on any control/view (or navigates to it in any other way), the background of the SplitViewItem that contains that view item should change. As I do not know which/how many views will be enclosed in the ViewController in the SplitViewItem, I'd prefer to detect which SplitViewItem is the 'active' one in the SplitViewController.
I have been searching for a solution all day long. I could not find any kind of notification, nor found a way to solve this managing the responder chain.
Can anybody please point me in the right direction? A (swift) code example would be highly appreciated.
Thanks!
swift nssplitview nssplitviewcontroller
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I have a SplitView with (several) SplitViewItems. Echt SplitViewItem has a ViewController with multiple views in it.
I need to detect which of the SplitViewItems has the focus of the user.
For example: if the user clicks on any control/view (or navigates to it in any other way), the background of the SplitViewItem that contains that view item should change. As I do not know which/how many views will be enclosed in the ViewController in the SplitViewItem, I'd prefer to detect which SplitViewItem is the 'active' one in the SplitViewController.
I have been searching for a solution all day long. I could not find any kind of notification, nor found a way to solve this managing the responder chain.
Can anybody please point me in the right direction? A (swift) code example would be highly appreciated.
Thanks!
swift nssplitview nssplitviewcontroller
add a comment |
I have a SplitView with (several) SplitViewItems. Echt SplitViewItem has a ViewController with multiple views in it.
I need to detect which of the SplitViewItems has the focus of the user.
For example: if the user clicks on any control/view (or navigates to it in any other way), the background of the SplitViewItem that contains that view item should change. As I do not know which/how many views will be enclosed in the ViewController in the SplitViewItem, I'd prefer to detect which SplitViewItem is the 'active' one in the SplitViewController.
I have been searching for a solution all day long. I could not find any kind of notification, nor found a way to solve this managing the responder chain.
Can anybody please point me in the right direction? A (swift) code example would be highly appreciated.
Thanks!
swift nssplitview nssplitviewcontroller
I have a SplitView with (several) SplitViewItems. Echt SplitViewItem has a ViewController with multiple views in it.
I need to detect which of the SplitViewItems has the focus of the user.
For example: if the user clicks on any control/view (or navigates to it in any other way), the background of the SplitViewItem that contains that view item should change. As I do not know which/how many views will be enclosed in the ViewController in the SplitViewItem, I'd prefer to detect which SplitViewItem is the 'active' one in the SplitViewController.
I have been searching for a solution all day long. I could not find any kind of notification, nor found a way to solve this managing the responder chain.
Can anybody please point me in the right direction? A (swift) code example would be highly appreciated.
Thanks!
swift nssplitview nssplitviewcontroller
swift nssplitview nssplitviewcontroller
asked Nov 16 '18 at 17:39
JohannesJohannes
186
186
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1 Answer
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It took me quite some research, but I found a working solution. Not the most elegant, but working.
I found the best approach to be to add an event monitor to the SplitViewController.
In viewDidLoad() add the following code:
NSEvent.addLocalMonitorForEvents(matching: [.keyDown, .leftMouseDown, .flagsChanged]) { [unowned self] (theEvent) -> NSEvent? in
let eventLocation = theEvent.locationInWindow
let numberOfSplitViews = self.splitViewItems.count
var activeIndex: Int?
for index in 0..<numberOfSplitViews {
let view = self.splitViewItems[index].viewController.view
let locationInView = view.convert(eventLocation, from: nil)
if ((locationInView.x > 0) && (locationInView.x < view.bounds.maxX) && (locationInView.y > 0) && (locationInView.y < view.bounds.maxY)) {
activeIndex = index
break
}
}
switch theEvent.type {
case .keyDown:
print("key down in pane (activeIndex)")
self.keyDown(with: theEvent)
case .leftMouseDown, .rightMouseDown:
print("mouse down in pane (activeIndex)")
self.mouseDown(with: theEvent)
case .flagsChanged:
print("flags changed in pane (activeIndex)")
self.flagsChanged(with: theEvent)
default:
print("captured some unhandled event in pane (activeIndex)")
}
return theEvent
}
(you may have to tweak the relevant events to your own liking. Also, you may need to remover the monitor using NSEvent.removeMonitor(_:)).
In addition (out of scope of this question), you might also want to consider making the variable activeIndex an observable class variable (I did this using RxSwift), allowing you to easily react on any change happening inside the 'active pane'.
Any more elegant/simple solutions are welcome!
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
It took me quite some research, but I found a working solution. Not the most elegant, but working.
I found the best approach to be to add an event monitor to the SplitViewController.
In viewDidLoad() add the following code:
NSEvent.addLocalMonitorForEvents(matching: [.keyDown, .leftMouseDown, .flagsChanged]) { [unowned self] (theEvent) -> NSEvent? in
let eventLocation = theEvent.locationInWindow
let numberOfSplitViews = self.splitViewItems.count
var activeIndex: Int?
for index in 0..<numberOfSplitViews {
let view = self.splitViewItems[index].viewController.view
let locationInView = view.convert(eventLocation, from: nil)
if ((locationInView.x > 0) && (locationInView.x < view.bounds.maxX) && (locationInView.y > 0) && (locationInView.y < view.bounds.maxY)) {
activeIndex = index
break
}
}
switch theEvent.type {
case .keyDown:
print("key down in pane (activeIndex)")
self.keyDown(with: theEvent)
case .leftMouseDown, .rightMouseDown:
print("mouse down in pane (activeIndex)")
self.mouseDown(with: theEvent)
case .flagsChanged:
print("flags changed in pane (activeIndex)")
self.flagsChanged(with: theEvent)
default:
print("captured some unhandled event in pane (activeIndex)")
}
return theEvent
}
(you may have to tweak the relevant events to your own liking. Also, you may need to remover the monitor using NSEvent.removeMonitor(_:)).
In addition (out of scope of this question), you might also want to consider making the variable activeIndex an observable class variable (I did this using RxSwift), allowing you to easily react on any change happening inside the 'active pane'.
Any more elegant/simple solutions are welcome!
add a comment |
It took me quite some research, but I found a working solution. Not the most elegant, but working.
I found the best approach to be to add an event monitor to the SplitViewController.
In viewDidLoad() add the following code:
NSEvent.addLocalMonitorForEvents(matching: [.keyDown, .leftMouseDown, .flagsChanged]) { [unowned self] (theEvent) -> NSEvent? in
let eventLocation = theEvent.locationInWindow
let numberOfSplitViews = self.splitViewItems.count
var activeIndex: Int?
for index in 0..<numberOfSplitViews {
let view = self.splitViewItems[index].viewController.view
let locationInView = view.convert(eventLocation, from: nil)
if ((locationInView.x > 0) && (locationInView.x < view.bounds.maxX) && (locationInView.y > 0) && (locationInView.y < view.bounds.maxY)) {
activeIndex = index
break
}
}
switch theEvent.type {
case .keyDown:
print("key down in pane (activeIndex)")
self.keyDown(with: theEvent)
case .leftMouseDown, .rightMouseDown:
print("mouse down in pane (activeIndex)")
self.mouseDown(with: theEvent)
case .flagsChanged:
print("flags changed in pane (activeIndex)")
self.flagsChanged(with: theEvent)
default:
print("captured some unhandled event in pane (activeIndex)")
}
return theEvent
}
(you may have to tweak the relevant events to your own liking. Also, you may need to remover the monitor using NSEvent.removeMonitor(_:)).
In addition (out of scope of this question), you might also want to consider making the variable activeIndex an observable class variable (I did this using RxSwift), allowing you to easily react on any change happening inside the 'active pane'.
Any more elegant/simple solutions are welcome!
add a comment |
It took me quite some research, but I found a working solution. Not the most elegant, but working.
I found the best approach to be to add an event monitor to the SplitViewController.
In viewDidLoad() add the following code:
NSEvent.addLocalMonitorForEvents(matching: [.keyDown, .leftMouseDown, .flagsChanged]) { [unowned self] (theEvent) -> NSEvent? in
let eventLocation = theEvent.locationInWindow
let numberOfSplitViews = self.splitViewItems.count
var activeIndex: Int?
for index in 0..<numberOfSplitViews {
let view = self.splitViewItems[index].viewController.view
let locationInView = view.convert(eventLocation, from: nil)
if ((locationInView.x > 0) && (locationInView.x < view.bounds.maxX) && (locationInView.y > 0) && (locationInView.y < view.bounds.maxY)) {
activeIndex = index
break
}
}
switch theEvent.type {
case .keyDown:
print("key down in pane (activeIndex)")
self.keyDown(with: theEvent)
case .leftMouseDown, .rightMouseDown:
print("mouse down in pane (activeIndex)")
self.mouseDown(with: theEvent)
case .flagsChanged:
print("flags changed in pane (activeIndex)")
self.flagsChanged(with: theEvent)
default:
print("captured some unhandled event in pane (activeIndex)")
}
return theEvent
}
(you may have to tweak the relevant events to your own liking. Also, you may need to remover the monitor using NSEvent.removeMonitor(_:)).
In addition (out of scope of this question), you might also want to consider making the variable activeIndex an observable class variable (I did this using RxSwift), allowing you to easily react on any change happening inside the 'active pane'.
Any more elegant/simple solutions are welcome!
It took me quite some research, but I found a working solution. Not the most elegant, but working.
I found the best approach to be to add an event monitor to the SplitViewController.
In viewDidLoad() add the following code:
NSEvent.addLocalMonitorForEvents(matching: [.keyDown, .leftMouseDown, .flagsChanged]) { [unowned self] (theEvent) -> NSEvent? in
let eventLocation = theEvent.locationInWindow
let numberOfSplitViews = self.splitViewItems.count
var activeIndex: Int?
for index in 0..<numberOfSplitViews {
let view = self.splitViewItems[index].viewController.view
let locationInView = view.convert(eventLocation, from: nil)
if ((locationInView.x > 0) && (locationInView.x < view.bounds.maxX) && (locationInView.y > 0) && (locationInView.y < view.bounds.maxY)) {
activeIndex = index
break
}
}
switch theEvent.type {
case .keyDown:
print("key down in pane (activeIndex)")
self.keyDown(with: theEvent)
case .leftMouseDown, .rightMouseDown:
print("mouse down in pane (activeIndex)")
self.mouseDown(with: theEvent)
case .flagsChanged:
print("flags changed in pane (activeIndex)")
self.flagsChanged(with: theEvent)
default:
print("captured some unhandled event in pane (activeIndex)")
}
return theEvent
}
(you may have to tweak the relevant events to your own liking. Also, you may need to remover the monitor using NSEvent.removeMonitor(_:)).
In addition (out of scope of this question), you might also want to consider making the variable activeIndex an observable class variable (I did this using RxSwift), allowing you to easily react on any change happening inside the 'active pane'.
Any more elegant/simple solutions are welcome!
edited Nov 19 '18 at 14:11
answered Nov 19 '18 at 13:47
JohannesJohannes
186
186
add a comment |
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