Here's an elegant, up to date solution.
As stated by others, first make sure that all you have constraints running from the very top of your header view to the top of the first subview, from the bottom of the first subview to the top of the second subview, etc, and from the bottom of the last subview to the bottom of your header view. Only then auto layout can know how to resize your view.
The following code snipped returns the calculated size of your header view.
func collectionView(_ collectionView: UICollectionView, layout collectionViewLayout: UICollectionViewLayout, referenceSizeForHeaderInSection section: Int) -> CGSize {
// Get the view for the first header
let indexPath = IndexPath(row: 0, section: section)
let headerView = self.collectionView(collectionView, viewForSupplementaryElementOfKind: UICollectionView.elementKindSectionHeader, at: indexPath)
// Use this view to calculate the optimal size based on the collection view's width
return headerView.systemLayoutSizeFitting(CGSize(width: collectionView.frame.width, height: UIView.layoutFittingExpandedSize.height),
withHorizontalFittingPriority: .required, // Width is fixed
verticalFittingPriority: .fittingSizeLevel) // Height can be as large as needed
}
Edit
As @Caio noticed in the comments, this solution will cause a crash on iOS 10 and older.
In my project, I've "solved" this by wrapping the code above in if #available(iOS 11.0, *) { ... }
and providing a fixed size in the else clause. That's not ideal, but acceptable in my case.
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