ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

Why is there extra padding at the top of my UITableView with style UITableViewStyleGrouped in iOS7

Starting in iOS7, there is additional space at the top of my UITableView's which have a style UITableViewStyleGrouped.

Here is an example:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/yNYTL.png

The tableview starts at the first arrow, there are 35 pixels of unexplained padding, then the green header is a UIView returned by viewForHeaderInSection (where the section is 0).

Can anyone explain where this 35-pixel amount is coming from and how I can get rid of it without switching to UITableViewStylePlain?

Update (Answer):

In iOS 11 and later:

tableView.contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior = .never
are you using the latest iOS 7? Some of these TYPES of inconsistencies (but not all, and perhaps not this one) have been cured during in the later dev previews. I should know: I procrastinated so much some of the problems disappeared.
Short answer is that this extra padding is probably due to the table view header (not the section header), and that UITableView doesn't like to be assigned a header with a height of 0.0. Check stackoverflow.com/a/31223403/1394534 for more details.
self.tableView.tableHeaderView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, CGFLOAT_MIN)]; note: 0.0f is just ignored if you use it in the height of the rect. So we use the nearest-to-zero CGFloat possible (at least this "worked" for me... just not ideal solution).
@AlejandroIván your comment just made my night. I've got a tableView with grouped prototypes. I'm using numberSections = data.count and setting numberRows = 1. I set a heightForFooterInSection to make a clean space between each and for some reason a blank tableHeaderView appeared.

A
Alexander

I was helped by the following:

YouStoryboard.storyboard > YouViewController > Attributes inspector > Uncheck - Adjust scroll view insets.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/CUVgX.png


I think this is the correct way of removing that padding, instead of tampering with edgeInset values.
This didn't work for me -- I have an opaque navBar above and this turned off pushes the content under it.
Does not work when using custom collectionview. (When tableview is inside collectionviewcell)
Didn't work for me; Only thing that worked was switching to Plain instead of Grouped
I had this problem with a TableViewController inside a container view. I had to set this property not directly on the TableViewController which was embedded, but on the view controller which contained the container view. Then it worked.
M
Mr. T

I played around with it a bit more and it seems like this is a side-effect of setting the tableView's tableHeaderView = nil.

Because my tableView has a dynamically appearing tableHeaderView, when I need to hide the tableHeaderView, instead of doing self.tableView.tableHeaderView = nil;, I do:

self.tableView.tableHeaderView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0.0f, 0.0f, self.tableView.bounds.size.width, 0.01f)];

I like this solution better than setting a somewhat arbitrary contentInset.top because I use the contentInset.top dynamically as well. Having to remember to remove an extra 35px whenever I recalculate contentInset.top is tedious.


Great solution! Indeed, you have to set it to 0.01f to get rid of the default table view header view as in your code.
BTW, this is also possible to do with one drag & drop in the Interface Builder. Anyway, thanks! :)
you sir deserves a medal for this
Bear in mind that a 0.01f height view at the top of your table view will mean all the cells beaneath are misaligned (first cell with have a Y origin of 0.01, the next of cell_height+0.01, etc) so the contents of those cells will be misaligned. (Turn on Debug > Color Misaligned Images in the simulator to see this for yourself.) You don't want to do that.
It's better to use UITableViewHeaderFooterView instead of UIView. And CGFLOAT_MIN works the same as 0.01f but better in theory.
Y
YannSteph

Try changing the contentInset property that UITableView inherits from UIScrollView.

self.tableView.contentInset = UIEdgeInsetsMake(-20, 0, 0, 0);

It's a workaround, but it works


contentTableView.contentInset = UIEdgeInsetsMake(-20, 0, -20, 0); worked best for me because there were 20 extra pixels at the top and bottom.
Although this "brute force" solution works, I think the bottom ones (specifically the automatically adjust insets) should be ranked higher.
total hack but iOS is garbage so what can you do.
B
Beslan Tularov

For IOS 7 if you are allocing a tableview in a view controller you may look into

self.edgesForExtendedLayout = UIRectEdgeNone;

your problem seemed similar to mine

Update:

Swift in iOS 9.x:

self.edgesForExtendedLayout = UIRectEdge.None

Swift 3 :

self.edgesForExtendedLayout = UIRectEdge.init(rawValue: 0)

Worked on my plain UITableView. The issues stems from the fact my UITableView was on a UIViewController inside a UINavigationController which caused the table content to drop down 44 points so initial content wasn't up behind the navBar. That wasn't needed with my layout though, so it just caused issues. Eventually I changed my code to automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets which worked also.
This property is applied only to view controllers that are embedded in a container such as UINavigationController. The window’s root view controller does not react to this property. The default value of this property is all. ..I feel like the default should be 0? Where does this have an advantage.
More elegant with Swift 3: edgesForExtendedLayout = []
Hello @yeahdixon What software do you use to make the pink arrow ? thanks in advance
p
pkamb
self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = NO;

try, you can deal with it!


This works great to hide the tableHeaderView in iOS 7.0, but it isn't supported in older versions.
Works great under iOS 7.
Important: Make sure you do this in the container view controller, if your UITableView is placed on a controller which is then embedded into another controller, do this in the embedding top controller, not directly the one where you put the UITableView (where AutoLayout will take care of things).
This is better than uncheck Adjust scroll view insets. Because sometimes we don't use storyboard to build our UI.
This was deprecated in iOS 11.0. Xcode will warn you about this. Use this instead, on the scroll view that you don't want insets automatically adjusted on: self.tableView.contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior = .never
S
Suraj Mirajkar

You could detect if your app is running iOS7 or greater and add this two methods in your table view delegate (usually in your UIViewController code)

-(CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForHeaderInSection:(NSInteger)section {
    return CGFLOAT_MIN;
}

-(CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForFooterInSection:(NSInteger)section {
    return CGFLOAT_MIN;
}

This maybe is not an elegant solution but works for me

Swift version:

override func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, heightForHeaderInSection section: Int) -> CGFloat {
    return CGFloat.leastNormalMagnitude
}

override func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, heightForFooterInSection section: Int) -> CGFloat {
    return CGFloat.leastNormalMagnitude
}

This worked for me. UITableView adds space on top for lots of different reasons. Specifically, related to OP, the problem only happens for grouped style table view. And this solution fixed the problem.
You can use CGFLOAT_MIN instead of 0.001 it gives you the smallest absolute value of CGFloat.
This is the correct answer since the real feature is that padding is there only in the grouped style table view and is ignored if you specify the header/footer
This should be marked as the correct answer. A delegate method to override and it answers the question. At least try this first if you read this far down all the hacks. Try tweeting : -(CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForHeaderInSection:(NSInteger)section { //return CGFLOAT_MIN; return 30.0f; }
Nice! As a bonus, if you want a little header on top and more in between the grouped sections, you can use the following: override func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, heightForHeaderInSection section: Int) -> CGFloat { return section == 0 ? 14 : 24 }
e
esilver

I have found the cause of my original bug and created a sample project showcasing it. I believe there is an iOS7 bug.

As of iOS7, if you create a UITableView with the Grouped style, but do not have a delegate set on first layout, then you set a delegate and call reloadData, there will be a 35px space at the top that will never go away.

See this project I made showcasing the bug: https://github.com/esilverberg/TableViewDelayedDelegateBug

Specifically this file: https://github.com/esilverberg/TableViewDelayedDelegateBug/blob/master/TableViewDelayedDelegateBug/ViewController.m

If line 24 is active,

[self performSelector:@selector(updateDelegate) withObject:nil afterDelay:0.0];

there will be an extra 35 px space at the top. If line 27 is active and 24 is commented out,

self.tableView.delegate = self;

no space at the top. It's like the tableView is caching a result somewhere and not redrawing itself after the delegate is set and reloadData is called.


I'd add that even if there is a delegate but the delegate's tableView:heightForHeaderInSection: and tableView:heightForFooterInSection: returns 0 you will also have this problem. Implementing the protocol methods above AND returning 0.01f fixed it for me.
YES!! I've tried 3 so called solutions, and this was the one! Brilliant, thanks :D
perfect. Anyone reported a bug because I think this is not the intended behaviour.
great find! This is still happening in ios 9 (we're not using XIBs) but setting the delegate on init fixed the spacing (not in loadView or viewDIdLoad). Thank you!
Setting estimatedHeight for header helped me
D
Dani

Uncheck "Adjust Scroll View insets"

https://i.stack.imgur.com/keeaD.png


I needed this option for another View Controller of mine, and apparently when I made a new VC, the change carried over. Thanks for this!
Yeah! Works, justo set it in ContainerView and works!
M
Mike Gledhill

Another quick comment... even in XCode 6.1, there is a bug with vertical spaces appearing at the top of UIScrollViews, UITextViews and UITableViews.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/2JLvN.png

Sometimes, the only way to fix this issue is to go into the Storyboard and drag the problem control so it's no longer the first subview on the page.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/qNA76.png

(My thanks to Oded for pointing me in this direction... I'm posting this comment, just to add a few screenshots, to demonstrate the symptoms and fix.)


Note that this bug, errrr, issue also happens in iOS 8 if you have a UITextView as the first sub-control on your page... so it's not just a UITableView issue.
Out of all solution only this hack worked for me. A weird fix to a weird bug. I've faced this issue with UITableview.
1 million thank you's! This is the only solution which worked for me.
(I'm amazed its 18 months later, and readers are still voting up this answer. Has Apple seriously not fixed this issue yet ?!)
saved my life! thanks. do you know how long it took to find this simple little "fix"? grrh.
L
Levan Karanadze

Solution for iOS 15:

if #available(iOS 15.0, *) {
  tableView.sectionHeaderTopPadding = 0
}

To fix in a whole project:

if #available(iOS 15.0, *) {
    UITableView.appearance().sectionHeaderTopPadding = 0
}

More details: Extra padding above table view headers in iOS 15

Note: This only applies to UITableView.Style.plain.


Perfect, thanks! None of the other answers here addressed the issue for me.
Thanks!! it is working perfectly.
This. Thank you. I beat my head against a wall for a while trying to figure this out. I upgraded my phone to iOS 15, and any new builds of my app manifested this behavior. However, my existing build on the app store did not. Thanks again.
Thanks, you saved my day! :D
Reference to member 'sectionHeaderTopPadding' cannot be resolved without a contextual type
A
Aqib Mumtaz

While using grouped TableView use this to avoid border cutting in viewWillAppear

self.tableView.contentInset = UIEdgeInsetsMake(-35, 0, 0, 0);

Tried all the others. This is the one that worked! Thx
g
girish_vr

According to this transition guide for iOS7 by Apple, the scroll view’s content insets is automatically adjusted. The default value of automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets is set to YES.

The UIViewController which has the UITableView should set this property to NO.

self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = NO;

This will do the trick.

EDIT 1:

Also, one could try -

self.navigationController.navigationBar.translucent = YES;

This also removes the extra padding on the top.


Very good answer, unless it don't exactly answer the question. Esilver talks about 35px gap, but iOS7 adds extra 20px header: equal to the status bar height.
Ridiculous problem. Thanks for the answer.
This is the answer to a different problem.
Thank you it worked for me, in my particular case I had a tableviewcontroller embedded in the viewcontroller, and by setting automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = false in the viewcontroller the top gap disappeared
A
Aurelien Porte

A lot of the previous answers above are too hacky. They would break at anytime in the future if Apple decides to fix this unexpected behavior.

Root of the issue:

a UITableView doesn't like to have a header with a height of 0.0. If what's you're trying to do is to have a header with a height of 0, you can jump to the solution. even if later you assign a non 0.0 height to your header, a UITableView doesn't like to be assigned a header with a height of 0.0 at first.

Solution:

Then, the most simple and reliable fix is to ensure that your header height is not 0 when you assign it to your table view.

Something like this would work:

// Replace UIView with whatever class you're using as your header below:
UIView *tableViewHeaderView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0.0, 0.0, self.tableView.bounds.size.width, CGFLOAT_MIN)];
self.tableView.tableHeaderView = tableViewHeaderView;

Something like this would lead to the issue at some point (typically, after a scroll):

// Replace UIView with whatever class you're using as your header below:
UIView *tableViewHeaderView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectZero];
self.tableView.tableHeaderView = tableViewHeaderView;

Finally, I found the answer that works. Thanks. Besides, I learnt that tableView.tableHeaderView is actually an accessory view above row content. I was confused with section headers all the way until your answer came out.
CGFLOAT_MIN has been replaced with CGFloat.leastNormalMagnitude in Swift 3
B
Bartłomiej Semańczyk

Storyboard:

Just uncheck: Adjust Scroll View Insets in View Controller's options

https://i.stack.imgur.com/J4C7u.png

Code:

self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = false

using xcode 7 I don't see Attribute inspector > Layout, where should I add self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = false
in view did load.
s
shim

This is the solution for iOS 10 using Swift 3:

You can get rid of top and bottom paddings by implementing the following methods from the UITableViewDelegate.

func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, heightForHeaderInSection section: Int) -> CGFloat
{ 
    return CGFloat.leastNormalMagnitude
}

func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, heightForFooterInSection section: Int) -> CGFloat
{
   return CGFloat.leastNormalMagnitude
}

Second page on SO helped me.... I dont know why, maybe because of the AutomaticDimension, maybe because of the Constraints with the VFL, anyhow, thank you! ozi bua ist brav! :D
These are the section headers and footers. The question relates to the whole table header. Also, there is nothing specific to Swift3 or iOS 10 in either delegate method (they've been around since forever).
V
Vipul Kumar

This code worked for me, The best answer for me that was written in objective-C at up-side so I converted it into Swift.

For Swift 4.0+

self.tableView.tableHeaderView = UIView(frame: CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: self.tableView.bounds.size.width, height: .leastNonzeroMagnitude))

Just write this into viewDidLoad() and it will work like a charm.

For iOS 15+, above one won't work, so use this:-

 if #available(iOS 15.0, *) {
      tableView.sectionHeaderTopPadding = 0
 }

For iOS 15+, if you want to apply change for your whole project, so use this:-

func application(_ application: UIApplication, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: [UIApplication.LaunchOptionsKey: Any]?) -> Bool {
    
    if #available(iOS 15.0, *) {
        UITableView.appearance().sectionHeaderTopPadding = 0.0
    }
}

to avoid values, I'd recommend to put ".leastNonzeroMagnitude" instead of 0.01;
s
sunshinejr

So I was trying every method here, and this time none of them helped. My case was a grouped table view on iOS 9. I don't really know why and how I found out this one, but for me, setting the tableViewHeader with a UIView with at least 0.01 height worked out. CGRectZero didn't help, nothing really helped:

tableView.tableHeaderView = UIView(frame: CGRect(x: 0.0, y: 0.0, width: 0.0, height: 0.01))

Thank. It help me!
Saved my day, mate.
j
judepereira

Simply add the following to your viewDidLoad in your VC:

self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = NO;

This fix worked and I prefer it to manually setting the insets using magic numbers. Thanks!
L
Lukas

In my case this was what helped me. I'm supporting ios6 also.

if ([[[UIDevice currentDevice] systemVersion] floatValue] >= 7) {
    self.edgesForExtendedLayout = UIRectEdgeNone;
    self.extendedLayoutIncludesOpaqueBars = NO;
    self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = NO;
}

Not sure what this does but it worked perfectly. Could you give some explanation?
@MattWolfe I was lost, and found this solution, not sure either why this is happening. My guess is that controller is deciding that tableview needs an inset, because of the status bar(or in other cases toolbar/tabbar) so it automatically adds it. I'm really struggling with some of the new iOS7 "features". Maybe some one understands it, and has a real explanation on this?
Spent the last 2 days porting a relatively small app to iOS 7 and still having minor issues.. I fix it in ios 7 it breaks in 6 and vice versa.. Driving me nuts!
This is a different problem than OP. Even with this, for grouped table view, an extra space is added on the top.
this seems to be the key line: self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = NO; just setting that removed the extra space I had.
S
Saeed Ir

This is how it can be fixed easily in iOS 11 and Xcode 9.1 through Storyboard:

Select Table View > Size Inspector > Content Insets: Never


Worked for me :)
Great! Thanks :)
This is instead of automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets in ios 11
V
Vinod Joshi

Swift: iOS I had tableview on scroll view .. when I was click "Back" on the same screen. Scroll view take more space on top.. to solve this I have used :

 self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = false

A Boolean value that indicates whether the view controller should automatically adjust its scroll view insets. Default value is true, which allows the view controller to adjust its scroll view insets in response to the screen areas consumed by the status bar, navigation bar, and toolbar or tab bar. Set to false if you want to manage scroll view inset adjustments yourself, such as when there is more than one scroll view in the view hierarchy.


A
Ashish Pisey

Thanks to the answer by @Aurelien Porte. Here is my solution

Cause of this issue:-

a UITableView doesn't like to have a header with a height of 0.0. If what's you're trying to do is to have a header with a height of 0, you can jump to the solution. even if later you assign a non 0.0 height to your header, a UITableView doesn't like to be assigned a header with a height of 0.0 at first.

In ViewDidLoad:-

self.edgesForExtendedLayout = UIRectEdge.None

self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = false

No Need For Something Like This :-

self.myTableview.contentInset = UIEdgeInsetsMake(-56, 0, 0, 0)

In heightForHeaderInSection delegate:-

if section == 0
    {
        return 1
    }
    else
    {
        return 40; // your other headers height value
    }

In viewForHeaderInSection delegate :-

if section == 0 
{  
   // Note CGFloat.min for swift
   // For Objective-c CGFLOAT_MIN 
   let headerView = UIView.init(frame: CGRectMake(0.0, 0.0, self.myShaadiTableview.bounds.size.width, CGFloat.min)) 
   return headerView
}
else
{ 
   // Construct your other headers here 
}

u
user832

To be specific, to remove tableviewHeader space from top i made these changes:

YouStoryboard.storyboard > YouViewController > Select TableView > Size inspector > Content insets - Set it to never.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/j9n14.png


What's the additional information other than the screenshot in comparison to this answer?
it is the same I guess, I didn't find that answer when I was looking for a solution. Should I delete my answer then..?
Not if you can expand a bit on your answer by describing why Content insets = Never actually solves this issue (how does this option work?).
When content insets is set to never, the tableView will not scroll up on textField editing.
K
Kevin

I'm assuming that is just part of the new UITableViewStyleGrouped styling. It is in all grouped table views and there doesn't seem to be any direct way to control that space.

If that space is being represented by a UIView, it would be possible to search through all the subviews of the UITableView to find that specific view and edit it directly. However, there is also the possibility that that space is just a hardcoded offset before headers and cells start and there won't be any way to edit it.

To search through all subviews (I would run this code when the table has no cells, to make it a little easier to read the output):

- (void)listSubviewsOfView:(UIView *)view {

    // Get the subviews of the view
    NSArray *subviews = [view subviews];

    // Return if there are no subviews
    if ([subviews count] == 0) return;

    for (UIView *subview in subviews) {

        NSLog(@"%@", subview);

        // List the subviews of subview
        [self listSubviewsOfView:subview];
    }
}

If UITableViews (to be more specific UITableViewCellScrollView) on iOS7 have taught us one thing, it's to leave the view hierarchy of built in classes alone.
Good point. The other option is... to keep hacking for each iOS ;)
Whoops, yeah. Meant to write that warning but forgot.
Kevin - I think you are right, this is by design. It appears that returning 0 for heightForHeaderInSection is the easiest way to remove this padding. For some reason on that particular instance it wasn't working for me, but it does work on other UITableViews.
It's definitely "by design". If you paused execution and ran: po [((UIApplication *)UIApplication.sharedApplication).keyWindow recursiveDescription] you'll see that the table header, or first section header, or first cell (depending on what you use) naturally leaves a 35px border.... boo.
z
zvjerka24

My answer is going to be more general answer, but can be applied on this as well.

If the root view (of the ViewController) or the first child (subview) of the root view is subclass of the UIScrollView (or UIScrollView itself), and if

self.navigationController.navigationBar.translucent = YES;

framework will automatically set pre-calculated contentInset.

To avoid this you can do

self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = NO;

but in my case I wasn't able to do this, because I was implementing SDK which has UIView component which can be used by other developers. That UIView component contains UIWebView (which has UIScrollView as the first subview). If that component is added as the first child in the UIViewController's view hierarchy, automatic insets will be applied by system.

I've fixed this by adding dummy view with frame (0,0,0,0) before adding UIWebView.

In this case system didn't find subclass of the UIScrollView as the first subview and didn't apply insets


livesaver! thank you self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = false
D
Dani

The only thing that worked for me was:

Swift:

tableView.sectionHeaderHeight = 0
tableView.sectionFooterHeight = 0

Objective-C:

self.tableView.sectionHeaderHeight = 0;
self.tableView.sectionFooterHeight = 0;

Also, I still had an extra space for the first section. That was because I was using the tableHeaderView property incorrectly. Fixed that as well by adding:

self.tableView.tableHeaderView = UIView(frame: CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: tableView.frame.size.width, height: 0.01))

Works for me for Swift 4.2. Thanks
Tried everything in this page, for iOS13 grouped tableview with header view. self.tableView.tableHeaderView = UIView(frame: CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: tableView.frame.size.width, height: 0.01)) . fixed the issue.
S
Sunil

Swift 4 code: For tableview with no section headers you can add this code:

func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, heightForHeaderInSection section: Int) -> CGFloat {
    return CGFloat.leastNormalMagnitude
}

and you will get the header spacing to 0.

If you want a header of your specific height pass that value:

func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, heightForHeaderInSection section: Int) -> CGFloat {
    return header_height
}

and the view from viewForHeaderinSection delegate.


This doesn't answer the question. The question was about where the extra spacing is coming from, not how to get rid of it.
weird thing is that if u return 0 in heightForHeaderInsection u still get this extra space. It works perfect with CGFloat.leastNormalMagnitude ( least positive number)
F
Fattie

2019 answer:

You just do this

tableView.contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior = .never

Bizarre subtle gotchya ->

Tableviews have a very strange behavior these days:

On devices with a notch (XR, etc) it will without telling you add more inset BUT ONLY IF the table starts at the physical top of the screen. If you start NOT at the top of the screen, it won't do that, but Both of those cases are >> unrelated << to safeAreaInsets ....... which is very confusing

All of that is totally undocumented ... you can waste hours figuring this out.

If you do need your measurements to start actually from the top of the screen/table,

in fact simply go:

tableView.contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior = .never

A good example is obviously when you add some sort of banner or similar thing over the top of a table, which is common these days, and you just set the top inset of the table to whatever height your banner/etc becomes when it's running.

To do that, you must use the

tableView.contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior = .never

call :/

Bonus gotchya

Don't forget that almost always these days, you're loading some information (user pictures, description, whatever) dynamically, so you can't set such values to the final needed value until the info arrives. Another gotchya. :/

So you'd have code like:

func setTableOffsetOnceFlagAreaSizeIsKnown() {
    tableView.contentInset.top = yourSpecialFlagViewUpTop.bounds.height
}

override func viewDidLayoutSubviews() {
    super.viewDidLayoutSubviews()
    setTableOffsetOnceFlagAreaSizeIsKnown()
}

O
Oded

I had the same fix as arielyz. Once I moved the UITableView to be not the first subview of the parent view, it went away. My space was 20 px, not 35.

I wasn't able to recreate it in a portrait xib, only a landscape xib. I'll file a radar bug later if I can reproduce it in a simple demo app.


Ran into the same issue, wasn't able to solve it by changing the contentInset but this method worked, even though it's pretty hacky. For what it's worth, using the visual debugging tool, I was able to see that while the UITableView had the right height, the UITableViewWrapper inside it did not.
Perfect. This fixed the bug for me, in XCode 6.1. None of the other suggestions in this StackOverflow page made any difference. I had a UITableView within a UIView, and it WAS the first subview. Dragging it to become the 2nd subview fixed it perfectly. (If anyone needs me, I'll be in the pub.)
Thank you! This also works if you have a table view controller within a container. Moving the container so that its not the first in the parent's view removes the gap at the top of the table view.
J
Jiangfan Du

I think making UIEdgeInsets -35 0 0 0 is tedious. In my case, I implemented tableView: heightForHeaderInSection: method and it has a potential to return 0.

When I changed 0 to 0.1f, the problem just went away.


If I could, I would upvote this more than once. Must be a weird autolayout glitch or something... As anything > 0 works, I suggest instead of 0.1 use FLT_EPSILON or DBL_EPSILON, seeing as both represent the smalles positive value such that 1.0 + epsilon != 1.0

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