Hi Remco,

I haven't done what you're asking so I don't have the sort of ready answer 
others on the list probably do, but I would ask why you don't use a detail 
disclosure button (i.e. the right arrow inside a blue circle) in each table 
cell for this purpose. UITableView very much supports this motif (tap the cell 
contents for one set of details, tap the accessory for another) and users will 
be familiar with the paradigm (e.g. in WiFi settings). 

It also saves users a tap, and minimizes the hiding of functionality.  

Conrad Shultz
www.synthetiqsolutions.com

On Sep 24, 2010, at 1:33, Remco Poelstra <re...@beryllium.net> wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> I've a UITableView with UITableViewCell of style UITableViewStyleSubtitle.
> The table shows devices that the app has found on the Wifi network. When I 
> click on a row I show a detailview of the device. This all works fine.
> The device has some internal configuration settings that the user needs to be 
> able to change (like whether the device uses DHCP for its IP address). In 
> order to let the user change these settings I've added a "settings" button to 
> my UIToolbar. When the user taps the button I want to show a button for each 
> row which allows the user to enter the configuration view. Much like the 
> "Delete" button in the e-mail app.
> I've found out that I can change the text of the default "Delete" button, but 
> how can I show that button without putting the UITableView in edit mode and 
> requiring the user to tap the delete circle (on the left) first?
> Or can I add such a button on the fly to all rows?

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