I tried that. I also tried inserting the section then moving the row. Both produce exceptions.
If you just do move, you get: Invalid update: invalid number of sections. The number of sections contained in the table view after the update (2) must be equal to the number of sections contained in the table view before the update (1), plus or minus the number of sections inserted or deleted (0 inserted, 0 deleted).
If you insert the section then move, you get: cannot move a row into a newly inserted section (1)
You must make sure that at the point you call endUpdates the methods numberOfSectionsInTableView: and tableView:numberOfRowsInSection: must correctly reflect the new values.
Yes, those methods return the correct values. The error message states the problem is the sections have not been inserted or deleted. If I insert them, it has already loaded the row. The problem is, because the new row is the same object as the row that has been removed from another section, it fails to render it correctly. I think the only solution to this would be a table reload.
Ah I see your new problem. You could always use two sections even if section 1 is empty at first. Then you can just animate the row into the empty section since you don't need to create it anymore.
If I return nil for titleForHeaderInSection then it doesn't display the header, so moving the cell works then. However, there is a rendering issue with the header as it displays in the wrong place with no background before rendering again some time after.
No I think it's a bug. There's nothing wrong about changing multiple things at once. If you do't need the header stick to the top you could also use a cell at position 0 of section 1 which just looks like the header.
Yup! You'd think it would be better having been there since day 1
Anyway, thanks for the help. I'll report what I've tried as a bug report. I'm just going to reload the table. No point wasting more time just to get a bit of animation. Cheers