iPad navigation automatically imposes slideout - ios

I have a NavigationView with three NavigationLinks, on portrait iPhone, it works as expected where one taps a link, a new view is presented with a Back button. However on an iPad in landscape (which this app is designed for only), iOS forces a slideout menu from the left side instead of showing the three links on the view.
import SwiftUI
struct ContentView: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationView {
HStack {
NavigationLink(destination: ContentView()) {
Text("Item 1")
}
NavigationLink(destination: ContentViewC()) {
Text("Item 2")
}
NavigationLink(destination: ContentViewB()) {
Text("Item 3")
}
}
}
}
}
Any suggestions for overriding this behavior?

You can solve this issue by adding this
.navigationViewStyle(StackNavigationViewStyle())
to your NavigationView
NavigationView {
...
}.navigationViewStyle(StackNavigationViewStyle())
This will force it to render a standard stack (like you see on the phone) rather than defaulting to the split view layout.

Related

SwiftUI: Navigation View/Bar/Link and ScrollView issues since iOS 14.5

Since iOS 14.5, the behaviour when pushing a new view onto a scrolled navigation view appears to have changed and no longer works the way it did on iOS 14.4
Image of the differences here
On iOS 14.4, when pushing a new view onto a NavigationView via a NavigationLink, the new view renders (as expected) with the .large NavigationBar in it's expanded state.
On iOS 14.5, with the exact same code, the new view renders with the .large NavigationBar in either an expanded or collapsed state (with the content scrolled up) depending on the state from the parent view.
If you have scrolled the parent view, the navigation bar will be collapsed. If you have not scrolled the parent view the navigation bar will be expanded.
This is not the behaviour I want or expect. I expect the navigation bar on the child view to always be expanded.
Code below:
struct RootView: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationView() {
ScrollView() {
VStack() {
Text("Root view")
.navigationTitle("Root")
.navigationBarTitleDisplayMode(.large)
.padding()
ForEach(0...50, id: \.self){ i in
NavigationLink(
destination:DetailView(title: "Link \(i)")
){
Text("Link \(i)")
}
}
}
}
}
.navigationViewStyle(StackNavigationViewStyle())
}
}
struct DetailView: View {
var title: String
var body: some View {
ScrollView() {
VStack() {
Text(title)
.navigationTitle("Detail")
.navigationBarTitleDisplayMode(.large)
ForEach(0...50, id: \.self) { x in
Text("Scroll content! \(x)")
}
}
}
}
}
Am I doing something wrong in how I set up the views?

SwiftUI navigation link back button working in preview but not in simulator or device

Im trying to use a simple navigation view, with a navigation link to a different view. When running the app and the navigation link is pressed it takes me to the new view.
However when I'm on a simulator or device the back button dose not work, whereas on the preview it works fine.
Any ideas what the problem may be?
import SwiftUI
struct HomeView: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationView {
VStack {
NavigationLink(destination: Text("Detail View")) {
Text("Hello World")
}
}
.navigationBarTitle("SwiftUI")
}
}
}
struct HomeView_Previews: PreviewProvider {
static var previews: some View {
HomeView()
}
}
I think the problem may be caused by the fact that the HomeView is part of a tabView. The following code is from AppView.swift which is what is run when the app is run (You can see the code for that at the very bottom).
I think this is the problem because when the code bellow is commented out the app works fine.
HomeView()
.tabItem {
Image(systemName: "house.fill")
Text("Home")
}
.onTapGesture {
self.selectedTab = 2
}
.tag(2)
#main
struct Skate_AppApp: App {
var body: some Scene {
WindowGroup {
HomeView()
}
}
}
From your code I can tell that the problem is in onTapGesture, and I presume from self.selectedTab = 2 that you want to get which tab the user has selected.
Let's refactor your code a little bit with the same concept.
Solution: Delete onTapGesture and add onAppear.
TabView {
HomeView().tabItem {
Image(systemName: "house.fill")
Text("Home")
}.onAppear{
self.selectedTab = 2
}.tag(2)
AnotherView().tabItem {
Image(systemName: "car.fill")
Text("Login View")
}.onAppear{
self.selectedTab = 3
}.tag(3)
}
By this whenever a view appears, it means that the user has selected it, onAppear will be called, and your variable selectedTab will be changed. I hope this answer your question.

How do I create a UISplitViewController in SwiftUI without grouped table style?

TL;DR
SwiftUI's UISplitViewSplitView controller setup is grouping my table view. Why?
struct ContentView: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationView {
List(0..<5) { value in
HStack {
Text("Value \(value)")
}
}
.navigationTitle("List View")
Text("Split View")
}
}
}
Sample 1
Longer
I'm working through the SwiftUI track of WWDC20, treating it as a code-a-long. Beginning with the first video, "Introduction to SwiftUI".
I started a whole sample project with resources and everything. Everything goes swimmingly until I start working to support the iPad. I'm aware that there did end up being some changes since the videos were produced, but haven't found any relevant to the UISplitController.
After the bug presented itself I stood up a smaller project that just presented the split controller to test this issue.
So long as I'm just presenting the ContentView for iPhone, the UI works as expected.
struct ContentView: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationView {
List(0..<5) { value in
HStack {
Text("Value \(value)")
}
}
.navigationTitle("List View")
}
}
}
Sample 2
I've tried executing on device and the problem persists.
Just use plain list style explicitly:
var body: some View {
NavigationView {
List(0..<5) { value in
HStack {
Text("Value \(value)")
}
}
.listStyle(PlainListStyle()) // << here !!
.navigationTitle("List View")
Text("Split View")
}
}

SwiftUI navigationView getting back only from second screen and not from the next ones

I've got a problem with SwiftUI.
Basically this is my view graph:
View1 -> View2 -> View3 -> etc.
Now i want to show a back button in View2, but when user gets to view 3, it shouldn't be visible.
I tried hiding and removing items, but still i can see back button on next views which will get me back to View1.
As i was unable to do this the pure and nice way, i created a custom button, with dismiss action, which has content and the action works if only property isShowingButton is true, then on getting to next view i toggle it to false. It works, maybe not nicest way but works. If somehow someone knows a better way to solve it, i'd be grateful
Without seeing your Code it's quite hard to tell where the issue is.
However the following Code is working for me
struct ContentView: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationView {
FirstView()
}
}
}
struct FirstView: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationLink(destination: SecondView()
) {
Text("Go to Second View")
}
.navigationBarTitle("FirstView", displayMode: .inline)
}
}
struct SecondView: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationLink(destination: ThirdView().navigationBarBackButtonHidden(true)
) {
Text("Go to Third View")
}
.navigationBarTitle("SecondView", displayMode: .inline)
}
}
struct ThirdView: View {
var body: some View {
Text("Third View without Back Button")
.navigationBarTitle("Third View", displayMode: .inline)
}
}
When navigating to View 3 you need to add .navigationBarBackButtonHidden(true) to the NagivationLink
struct ViewTwo: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationLink(destination: SecondView().navigationBarBackButtonHidden(true)
) {
Text("Go to View 3")
}
.navigationBarTitle("View 2", displayMode: .inline)
}
}

How to remove the default Navigation Bar space in SwiftUI NavigationView

I am new to SwiftUI (like most people) and trying to figure out how to remove some whitespace above a List that I embedded in a NavigationView.
In this image, you can see that there is some white space above the List.
What I want to accomplish is this:
I've tried using:
.navigationBarHidden(true)
but this did not make any noticeable changes.
I'm currently setting up my navigiationView like this:
NavigationView {
FileBrowserView(jsonFromCall: URLRetrieve(URLtoFetch: applicationDelegate.apiURL))
.navigationBarHidden(true)
}
where FileBrowserView is a view with a List and FileCells defined like this:
List {
Section(header: Text("Root")) {
FileCell(name: "Test", fileType: "JPG",fileDesc: "Test number 1")
FileCell(name: "Test 2", fileType: "txt",fileDesc: "Test number 2")
FileCell(name: "test3", fileType: "fasta", fileDesc: "")
}
}
I do want to note that the ultimate goal here is that you will be able to click on these cells to navigate deeper into a file tree and thus should display a Back button on the bar on deeper navigation, but I do not want anything at the top as such during my initial view.
For some reason, SwiftUI requires that you also set .navigationBarTitle for .navigationBarHidden to work properly.
NavigationView {
FileBrowserView(jsonFromCall: URLRetrieve(URLtoFetch: applicationDelegate.apiURL))
.navigationBarTitle("")
.navigationBarHidden(true)
}
Update
As #Peacemoon pointed out in the comments, the navigation bar remains hidden as you navigate deeper in the navigation stack, regardless of whether or not you set navigationBarHidden to false in subsequent views. As I said in the comments, this is either a result of poor implementation on Apple's part or just dreadful documentation (who knows, maybe there is a "correct" way to accomplish this).
Whatever the case, I came up with a workaround that seems to produce the original poster's desired results. I'm hesitant to recommend it because it seems unnecessarily hacky, but without any straightforward way of hiding and unhiding the navigation bar, this is the best I could do.
This example uses three views - View1 has a hidden navigation bar, and View2 and View3 both have visible navigation bars with titles.
struct View1: View {
#State var isNavigationBarHidden: Bool = true
var body: some View {
NavigationView {
ZStack {
Color.red
NavigationLink("View 2", destination: View2(isNavigationBarHidden: self.$isNavigationBarHidden))
}
.navigationBarTitle("Hidden Title")
.navigationBarHidden(self.isNavigationBarHidden)
.onAppear {
self.isNavigationBarHidden = true
}
}
}
}
struct View2: View {
#Binding var isNavigationBarHidden: Bool
var body: some View {
ZStack {
Color.green
NavigationLink("View 3", destination: View3())
}
.navigationBarTitle("Visible Title 1")
.onAppear {
self.isNavigationBarHidden = false
}
}
}
struct View3: View {
var body: some View {
Color.blue
.navigationBarTitle("Visible Title 2")
}
}
Setting navigationBarHidden to false on views deeper in the navigation stack doesn't seem to properly override the preference of the view that originally set navigationBarHidden to true, so the only workaround I could come up with was using a binding to change the preference of the original view when a new view is pushed onto the navigation stack.
Like I said, this is a hacky solution, but without an official solution from Apple, this is the best that I've been able to come up with.
View Modifiers made it easy:
//ViewModifiers.swift
struct HiddenNavigationBar: ViewModifier {
func body(content: Content) -> some View {
content
.navigationBarTitle("", displayMode: .inline)
.navigationBarHidden(true)
}
}
extension View {
func hiddenNavigationBarStyle() -> some View {
modifier( HiddenNavigationBar() )
}
}
Example:
import SwiftUI
struct MyView: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationView {
VStack {
Spacer()
HStack {
Spacer()
Text("Hello World!")
Spacer()
}
Spacer()
}
.padding()
.background(Color.green)
//remove the default Navigation Bar space:
.hiddenNavigationBarStyle()
}
}
}
The purpose of a NavigationView is to add the navigation bar on top of your view. In iOS, there are 2 kinds of navigation bars: large and standard.
If you want no navigation bar:
FileBrowserView(jsonFromCall: URLRetrieve(URLtoFetch: applicationDelegate.apiURL))
If you want a large navigation bar (generally used for your top-level views):
NavigationView {
FileBrowserView(jsonFromCall: URLRetrieve(URLtoFetch: applicationDelegate.apiURL))
.navigationBarTitle(Text("Title"))
}
If you want a standard (inline) navigation bar (generally used for sub-level views):
NavigationView {
FileBrowserView(jsonFromCall: URLRetrieve(URLtoFetch: applicationDelegate.apiURL))
.navigationBarTitle(Text("Title"), displayMode: .inline)
}
Hope this answer will help you.
More information: Apple Documentation
iOS 14+
There is a dedicated modifier to make the navigation bar take less space:
.navigationBarTitleDisplayMode(.inline)
EDIT
In some cases it may still be needed to add .navigationBarHidden(true)
If you set the title as inline for the View you want remove the space on, this doesn't need to be done on a view with a NavigationView, but the one navigated too.
.navigationBarTitle("", displayMode: .inline)
then simply change the Navigation bars appearance
init() {
UINavigationBar.appearance().setBackgroundImage(UIImage(), for: .default)
UINavigationBar.appearance().shadowImage = UIImage()
}
on the view that holds the initial NavigationView.
If you want to change the Appearance from screen to screen change the appearance in the appropriate views
For me, I was applying the .navigationBarTitle to the NavigationView and not to List was the culprit. This works for me on Xcode 11.2.1:
struct ContentView: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationView {
List {
NavigationLink(destination: DetailView()) {
Text("I'm a cell")
}
}.navigationBarTitle("Title", displayMode: .inline)
}
}
}
This is a bug present in SwiftUI (still as of Xcode 11.2.1). I wrote a ViewModifier to fix this, based on code from the existing answers:
public struct NavigationBarHider: ViewModifier {
#State var isHidden: Bool = false
public func body(content: Content) -> some View {
content
.navigationBarTitle("")
.navigationBarHidden(isHidden)
.onAppear { self.isHidden = true }
}
}
extension View {
public func hideNavigationBar() -> some View {
modifier(NavigationBarHider())
}
}
I also tried all the solutions mentioned on this page and only found #graycampbell solution the one to be working well, with well-working animations. So I tried to create a value I can just use throughout the app that I can access anywhere by the example of hackingwithswift.com
I created an ObservableObject class
class NavBarPreferences: ObservableObject {
#Published var navBarIsHidden = true
}
And pass it on to the initial view in the SceneDelegate like so
var navBarPreferences = NavBarPreferences()
window.rootViewController = UIHostingController(rootView: ContentView().environmentObject(navBarPreferences))
Then in the ContentView we can keep track of this Observable object like so and create a link to SomeView:
struct ContentView: View {
//This variable listens to the ObservableObject class
#EnvironmentObject var navBarPrefs: NavBarPreferences
var body: some View {
NavigationView {
NavigationLink (
destination: SomeView()) {
VStack{
Text("Hello first screen")
.multilineTextAlignment(.center)
.accentColor(.black)
}
}
.navigationBarTitle(Text(""),displayMode: .inline)
.navigationBarHidden(navBarPrefs.navBarIsHidden)
.onAppear{
self.navBarPrefs.navBarIsHidden = true
}
}
}
}
And then when accessing the second view (SomeView), we hide it again like this:
struct SomeView: View {
#EnvironmentObject var navBarPrefs: NavBarPreferences
var body: some View {
Text("Hello second screen")
.onAppear {
self.navBarPrefs.navBarIsHidden = false
}
}
}
To keep previews working add the NavBarPreferences to the preview like so:
struct SomeView_Previews: PreviewProvider {
static var previews: some View {
SomeView().environmentObject(NavBarPreferences())
}
}
You don't need to set the title, you can simply use .stack
NavigationView {
VStack {
Color.cyan
}
.navigationBarHidden(true)
}
.navigationViewStyle(.stack) // Here
Put on your NextView the following code
.navigationBarBackButtonHidden(true)
.navigationBarHidden(true)
But while pushing to the NextView via NavigationLink you have to put also the modifier like this :
NavigationLink(
destination: NextView()
.navigationBarTitle("")
.navigationBarHidden(true)
) {
Text("NEXT VIEW")
}
You could extend native View protocol like this:
extension View {
func hideNavigationBar() -> some View {
self
.navigationBarTitle("", displayMode: .inline)
.navigationBarHidden(true)
}
}
Then just call e.g.:
ZStack {
*YOUR CONTENT*
}
.hideNavigationBar()
For me it was because I was pushing my NavigationView from an existing. In effect having one inside the other. If you are coming from a NavigationView you do not need to create one inside the next as you already inside a NavigatonView.
My solution for this problem was the same as suggested by #Genki and #Frankenstein.
I applied two modifiers to the inner list (NOT the NavigationView) to get rid of the spacing:
.navigationBarTitle("", displayMode: .automatic)
.navigationBarHidden(true)
On the outer NavigationView, then applied .navigationBarTitle("TITLE") to set the title.
I try to add .navigationBarHidden(true) at the end of curly brackets of my Vstack like this
NavigationView { Vstack(){"some Code"}.navigationBarHidden(true)}
and the navigation bar disappear but if i add .navigationBarHidden(true) at the end of curly brackets of navigation bar like this
NavigationView { Vstack(){"some Code"}}.navigationBarHidden(true)
the navigation bar doesn't disappear
Same problem, I finally solved. For the navigation to completely disappear, you need to add these modifier to the NavigationView AND ALL NavigationsLinks inside it:
.navigationBarHidden(true)
.navigationBarTitleDisplayMode(.inline)
If you don't do it also with the NavigationLinks won't work.
Similar to the answer by #graycampbell but a little simpler:
struct YourView: View {
#State private var isNavigationBarHidden = true
var body: some View {
NavigationView {
VStack {
Text("This is the master view")
NavigationLink("Details", destination: Text("These are the details"))
}
.navigationBarHidden(isNavigationBarHidden)
.navigationBarTitle("Master")
.onAppear {
self.isNavigationBarHidden = true
}
.onDisappear {
self.isNavigationBarHidden = false
}
}
}
}
Setting the title is necessary since it is shown next to the back button in the views you navigate to.
I tried setting up
.navigationBarTitle("", displayMode: .inline) .navigationBarHidden(true)
But it wasn't working. The issue was I was setting it to
NavigationView{...}.navigationBarTitle("", displayMode: .inline)
.navigationBarHidden(true)
But to get rid of the NagigationBar it should be set to inner view of it
NavigationView{
InnerView{}.navigationBarTitle("", displayMode: .inline)
.navigationBarHidden(true)
}
Hope this helps
To see in action, You can look into this open source App(WIP) https://github.com/deepaksingh4/KidsBookApp
I have had a similar problem when working on an app where a TabView should be displayed once the user is logged in.
As #graycampbell suggested in his comment, a TabView should not be embedded in a NavigationView, or else the "blank space" will appear, even when using .navigationBarHidden(true)
I used a ZStack to hide the NavigationView. Note that for this simple example, I use #State and #Binding to manage the UI visibility, but you may want to use something more complex such as an environment object.
struct ContentView: View {
#State var isHidden = false
var body: some View {
ZStack {
if isHidden {
DetailView(isHidden: self.$isHidden)
} else {
NavigationView {
Button("Log in"){
self.isHidden.toggle()
}
.navigationBarTitle("Login Page")
}
}
}
}
}
When we press the Log In button, the initial page disappears, and the DetailView is loaded. The Login Page reappears when we toggle the Log Out button
struct DetailView: View {
#Binding var isHidden: Bool
var body: some View {
TabView{
NavigationView {
Button("Log out"){
self.isHidden.toggle()
}
.navigationBarTitle("Home")
}
.tabItem {
Image(systemName: "star")
Text("One")
}
}
}
}
I struggled on this for a while, but what finally worked for me is...
ZStack {
...
}
.edgesIgnoringSafeArea(.all) //or .edgesIgnoringSafeArea(.top)
.navigationBarBackButtonHidden(true)
.navigationBarHidden(true)
I have to navigate screen1 to screen2. If I use this for NavigationView like above answer Navigation bar will be hidden but its space still exist ( amount of space with height) in Screen 1.
Finally I have own solution that use this code in any view inside NavigationView and don't care about navigationBarTitle. Just like this:
Screen1:
NavigationView {
SomeView {
NavigationLink {
// go to screen2
}
}.navigationBarHidden(true)
}
Screen2:
NavigationView {
// some Views
}.navigationBarHidden(true)
I had the same issue and found the following code to work best.
.navigationTitle("")
.navigationBarBackButtonHidden(true)
This is by far the most simplest and stable approach I've found. You can hide both navigation title and back button by hiding the whole toolbar. You can show also choose to show it in any view you wish to. You can hide it by using .toolbar(.hidden) and make it visible by using the .toolbar(.visible) modifier.
iOS 16+
struct ContentView: View {
var body: some View {
NavigationStack {
List {
ForEach(0..<10) { i in
NavigationLink {
Text("Detail for Row \(i)")
} label: {
Text("Row \(i)")
}
}
}
.toolbar(.hidden)
}
}
}
If you targeting below iOS 16, you can replace the NavigationStack with NavigationView.
Try putting the attributes (navigation title, toolbar, etc) outside of the Navigation View. Like so:
NavigationView {
}
.navigationTitle("Detail News")
.toolbarColorScheme(.dark, for: .navigationBar)
.toolbarBackground(Color.gray, for: .navigationBar)
.toolbarBackground(.visible, for: .navigationBar)
.accentColor(.white)
Really loved the idea given by #Vatsal Manot To create a modifier for this.
Removing isHidden property from his answer, as I don't find it useful as modifier name itself suggests that hide navigation bar.
// Hide navigation bar.
public struct NavigationBarHider: ViewModifier {
public func body(content: Content) -> some View {
content
.navigationBarTitle("")
.navigationBarHidden(true)
}
}
extension View {
public func hideNavigationBar() -> some View {
modifier(NavigationBarHider())
}
}
I know I'm a bit late here, but I just fixed this problem using the top answer here:
How to get rid of space in nested NavigationView with SwiftUI
In case the content of that page changes, I'll explain the answer below.
Only use a NavigationView wrapper at the very top level of any view that needs navigation, no matter how far the nested children go down. They will all already have NavigationView properties and you can call NavigationLink at any time within the sub-views. I had a lot of extra NavigationView wrappers around sub-views, deleting them removed the extra white space while retaining the functionality of all navigation links.
Try putting the NavigationView inside a GeometryReader.
GeometryReader {
NavigationView {
Text("Hello World!")
}
}
I’ve experienced weird behavior when the NavigationView was the root view.

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