Technical Note TN2244: Launching your iPhone Application in Landscape states:
The values of the UISupportedInterfaceOrientations key determine how the status bar is positioned while the the app is launching. In iOS 7 and below, if the UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait value is present, the status bar will always be positioned for portrait orientation. Otherwise, the status bar will be positioned according to the first orientation that appears under the UISupportedInterfaceOrientations key.
So in iOS 8 it was perfectly fine to put UIInterfaceOrientationLandscape first in the UISupportedInterfaceOrientations list to have your app to start in Landscape.
It does not work anymore in iOS 9. Having UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait in the list at any position forces app to start in Portrait.
Question
Is there a known workaround for this? I need my app to start in Landscape.
Note: Using viewControllers' supportedInterfaceOrientations() method is not an option as it takes effect after the LaunchScreen is presented.
Having UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait in the list at any position forces app to start in Portrait.
That is absolutely correct — very good detective work. It took me a lot of experimentation to figure this out! This is certainly a huge change from iOS 8. You have summed up the situation very well.
Fortunately, the workaround is simple. In your Info.plist, include only the two landscape orientations. Now the app will launch into whichever one is first.
Now implement application:supportedInterfaceOrientationsForWindow: in the app delegate to return All. That way, when the time comes to show a portrait view controller, it will be legal to do so.
In other words, think of the Info.plist as what the launching app needs to know, and application:supportedInterfaceOrientationsForWindow: as what the running app needs to know.
Related
I'm working with Xamarin and am having troubles launching my app in the current device orientation.
I have a UINavigationController that I set on my main UIWindow as the root controller. I created a custom UINavigationController which overrides the methods :
GetSupportedInterfaceOrientations
and
ViewWillTransitionToSize
If I hold my iPad in landscape mode and start the app, it will start in portrait mode and then rotate in landscape. I'd like to make it start in the same orientation as the device's physical orientation. From the doc I've read it seems that since iOS 8, everything related to rotations should be handled in the root uiview controller which is my custom UINavigationController.
And here's my problem... let's say I want to start my app in the current device's orientation and then block everything except Portrait once the app is loaded. I tried the 2 following solutions and none worked.
1- I put all interface orientations available in the supported interface orientations key in the info.plist file. I launched the app while holding the iPad in landscape mode. In this case, my app starts in the same orientation as the device which is cool. What is not cool is that it doesn't call my navigation controller method GetSupportedInterfaceOrientations anymore. So even if I change the return value of that method to Portrait only later one, it does absolutely nothing since the method is never called anymore.
2- I removed all supported interface orientations from the info.plist file. I lauched the app while holding the iPad in landscape mode. In this case, my app starts in portrait mode and then rotates to landscape. I want to prevent the rotation and just start the app in the current device's orientation (landscape). With this setup though, I can later change the supported orientation as the navigation controller method GetSupportedInterfaceOrientations is being called everytime we try to rotate the app.
In apple's doc, it says "At launch time, apps should always set up their interface in a portrait orientation. After the application (_:didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:) method returns, the app uses the view controller rotation mechanism described above to rotate the views to the appropriate orientation prior to showing the window."
The part where the view rotates to the appropriate orientation PRIOR to showing the window doesn't seem to work for me. It shows the window and then rotates it after.
So how do you launch an app in the current device's orientation (without the user seeing your first view rotate from portrait to whatever) and then be able to change the supported orientations later in the app? Example : I hold my iPad in landscape mode. I launch my app. First view I see is already in landscape mode. I can then rotate my iPad to change the view in portrait/landscape back and forth. Then I click a button which changes the supported orientation to Portrait which prevents me from changing the orientation to Landscape anymore.
Thanks!
My app’s device orientation is set to portrait, however when rotating the device into landscape mode, the app is keeping its portait mode but the keyboard is rotating into landscape mode...Something that is unexpected.
Why is that happening and how to prevent it?
Thanks
Jrejory
After not getting any answer and making more researches, I came across this Answer:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/6941930/4400274
Because I just needed the portrait orientation in my app the following worked for me :
[[UIDevice currentDevice] endGeneratingDeviceOrientationNotifications];
I put that in my main Navigation Controller's viewDidLoad.
I know it's late. But maybe it will help someone else. I had the similar issue. My app should support portrait orientation for iPhone and all orientations for iPad. So, on the iPhone scene didn't rotate, but keyboard did. All my UI was made from code, I also init view controllers (including root) through code. But I didn't remove default Main.storyboard file. When I removed string in Target -> General -> Main Interface, it help me. It was not obvious.
I know that we can define main orientation in iOS apps. However I couldn't figure out a way to do what I want: If the device is in landscape mode, start the whole application in landscape mode. If not, start it in portrait.
Currently, if I start the application after rotating the device into landscape mode, It opens in portrait mode than it rotates. Is there a way to start the whole app in landscape? (Already rotated window)
Yes; just indicate that you support all device orientations in your info.plist. You can see this in Xcode in your project settings under "General" in Xcode 5.
Quote from Apple's UIViewController documentation:
Note: At launch time, apps should always set up their interface in a portrait orientation. After the application:didFinishLaunchingWithOptions: method returns, the app uses the view controller rotation mechanism described above to rotate the views to the appropriate orientation prior to showing the window.
I searched for other existing posts, but none of them satisfied my requirements.
Here is the problem i face,
My app supports both the Modes , landscape and portrait.
But my first screen only supports Landscape , so the app must start in Landscape.
I have set supported Orientation to all the 4 options
I have set the Initial interface orientation to Landscape (left home button)
In the view controller of the first screen i am defining the below
-(BOOL)shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation:(UIInterfaceOrientation)interfaceOrientation
{
return (interfaceOrientation != UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait);
}
And when i start the app the simulator always opens in Portrait and my view is all messed up in the portrait mode , since it is designed only for the landscape.
After the switch to the Landscape, the device remains in this mode.
can anyone help me with the solution to avoid this ?
Thanks
Naveen
EDITED :
This info may be helpful , The problem is faced only when i hold the device in Portrait and then launch the app.
Its not the duplication of this question, Landscape Mode ONLY for iPhone or iPad
Landscape Mode ONLY for iPhone or iPad
I do not want my app to be only in Landscape , i want only the first screen of my app to be only in Landscape.
I did some experimenting with an app I'm working on that has the same requirements, and came up with the following:
To set the initial orientations that are supported when the app is first launched, use the "Supported Device Orientations" setting for your target.
Also back that up with the appropriate shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation code, as you've already done.
For subsequent screens, simply use the shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation code to determine which orientations you want to support. Even if you've specified only landscape modes for the Supported Device Orientation, shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation wins. :)
I think this approach is a little cleaner than using an extra dummy VC.
I achieved a workaround for the Problem and it solved ,
I created a dummy view controller and added as the root view controller of the Window.
Added the below method in the implementation
-(void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
WelcomeScreen *welcomeScreen = [[[WelcomeScreen alloc] initWithNibName:#"WelcomeScreen" bundle:nil] autorelease];
[self presentModalViewController:welcomeScreen animated:NO];
}
Now it worked as expected.
Here is a SO link that will hopefully answer your question on how to launch your app in landscape mode.
My ipad app only runs in landscape orientation. But when I test on an actual device (not the simulator) it always seem to start in one particular landscape orientation, then turn 180 degrees to match the current physical landscape orientation. So, it seems to start in LandscapeLeft(I think) then rotate 180 if I have it in LandscapeRight. There's nothing in Info.plist to set the initial orientation.
Can anyone suggest a way to detect current orientation before view loads and set it to correct landscape view before showing?
Thanks
Fitto
There is the UIInterfaceOrientation~iPad key which sets the initial interface orientation on startup.
There is also the UISupportedInterfaceOrientations key which informs the app which orientations are supported.
There is no way, however, to make the app start in the current orientation of the iPad.
Have you looked into these questions?
Get current orientation of iPad?
iPad launch orientation
Also, technically, the iPad should just do it. Make sure you have supported orientations set properly, as I'm sure it checks those to see where it should start.