Created
April 3, 2014 18:58
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class CategoryCell < UITableViewCell | |
def rmq_build | |
rmq(self.contentView).tap do |q| | |
# Add your subviews, init stuff here | |
# @foo = q.append(UILabel, :foo).get | |
# | |
# Or use the built-in table cell controls, if you don't use | |
# these, they won't exist at runtime | |
# q.build(self.imageView, :cell_image) | |
@name = q.build(self.textLabel, :cell_label).get | |
#q.append(self.detailTextLabel, "test") | |
end | |
end | |
def update(data) | |
# Update data here | |
@name.text = data[:name] | |
@name.detailTextLabel = "test" | |
# @name.detail_text = "what" | |
end | |
end |
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When the table needs a cell, this line will be called:
rmq.create(ItemCell, :item_cell, reuse_identifier: ITEM_CELL_ID).get
rmq will create the view and .get passes back. However, RMQ does the most common kind of create. If you need to use some other init (initWithStyle) in this case, you can created it the old fashion way. Meaning just create the view normally using ItemCell.alloc.initWithStyle
If you want to initialize an existing view in rmq, use build, not create, some pseudo code:
view = ItemCell.alloc.initWithStyle(whatever params you want)
rmq.build(view, :item_cell)
This is true with any existing view, you can either append that view, prepend it, or if you just want to bring it into the rmq world, build it