I have a searchBar I'm setting in a tableviewcontroller. i've referenced this similar question UISearchBar cannot become first responder after UITableView did re-appear but am still unable to set it as first responder.
In .h file:
#property (strong, nonatomic) UISearchController *searchController;
#property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet UISearchBar *searchBar;
In view didload:
self.searchController = [[UISearchController alloc]initWithSearchResultsController:nil];
self.searchController.searchResultsUpdater = self;
self.searchController.dimsBackgroundDuringPresentation = NO;
self.searchController.hidesNavigationBarDuringPresentation = NO;
self.searchController.searchBar.frame = CGRectMake(self.searchController.searchBar.frame.origin.x, self.searchController.searchBar.frame.origin.y, self.searchController.searchBar.frame.size.width, 44.0);
self.tableView.tableHeaderView = self.searchController.searchBar;
And in viewDidAppear:
-(void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated {
[self.searchController setActive:YES];
[self.searchController.searchBar becomeFirstResponder];
[super viewDidAppear:animated];
}
When I segue to the view the searchBar animates, but no keyboard appears.
I noticed this issue too. What seems to happen is the call to becomeFirstResponder is done when the searchController is still 'loading'. If you comment out becomeFirstResponder you notice that there is no difference. So we need a way to call becomeFirstResponder after the searchController is 'done' loading.
When I looked at various delegate methods I noticed there is a delegate method:
- (void)didPresentSearchController:(UISearchController *)searchController
This method is called right after the searchController has been presented. Then I make the call to becomeFirstResponder:
- (void)didPresentSearchController:(UISearchController *)searchController
{
[searchController.searchBar becomeFirstResponder];
}
This fixes the problem. You will notice that when the searchController is loaded, the searchbar now has focus.
The solution with
- (void)didPresentSearchController:(UISearchController *)searchController did not work, since this delegate method is called only when the user taps on the search bar...
However, this solution did work:
- (void) viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[super viewDidAppear:animated];
[self performSelector:#selector(showKeyboard) withObject:nil afterDelay:0.1];
}
- (void) showKeyboard
{
[self.searchController.searchBar becomeFirstResponder];
}
Swift 3
delay(0.1) { self.searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder() }
func delay(_ delay: Double, closure: #escaping ()->()) {
let when = DispatchTime.now() + delay
DispatchQueue.main.asyncAfter(deadline: when, execute: closure)
}
Well, I found the solution that is actually perfectly working for me.
Don't call [self.searchController setActive:YES]; before calling [self.searchController.searchBar becomeFirstResponder];
What's better, don't call [self.searchController setActive:YES]; at all.
Call only [self.searchController.searchBar becomeFirstResponder]; and the keyboard just pops out as it should, without any delay.
It seems to be somewhat like a bug and a lot of people are confirming it. For example, check here: When assigning focus via becomeFirstResponder to UISearchController's UISearchBar, the keyboard does not appear
Swift 4, iOS 11
It works for me
// 1.
override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
resultSearchController.isActive = true
}
// 2. ->> UISearchControllerDelegate
func didPresentSearchController(_ searchController: UISearchController) {
DispatchQueue.main.async {
searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
}
}
The function searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder() must be called in the main thread and after searchController.active = true in the viewDidLoad method. Here're the full solution. It works on iOS 9.3
override func viewDidAppear(animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
searchController.active = true
Async.main {
self.searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
}
}
Very similar to other answers, but I had to access the main queue in the ViewDidAppear.
The SearchBarController can't be acted upon until the View appears and then can only be done so in the main queue for UI:
searchController.active = true // doubtful whether this is needed
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), {
self.searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
});
Easy Swift3 variant:
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
navigationItem.titleView = mySearchController.searchBar
mySearchController.searchResultsUpdater = self
mySearchController.delegate = self
}
override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
DispatchQueue.main.async {
self.mySearchController.isActive = true
}
}
func presentSearchController(_ searchController: UISearchController) {
mySearchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
}
It works ;-)
Swift 5 solution:
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
definesPresentationContext = true
searchController.delegate = self
}
override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
searchController.isActive = true
}
extension ViewController: UISearchControllerDelegate {
func didPresentSearchController(_ searchController: UISearchController) {
DispatchQueue.main.async {[weak self] in
self?.searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
}
}
}
Xcode 11.4, Swift 5.2
If you just want the SearchBar to appear but not activate the TextField & keyboard. There is no need to dispatch it to the main thread.
override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
searchController.isActive = true
}
If you want the TextField to activate with the keyboard, then you do need to call it on the main thread. There is no need to make the SearchController active, this happens automatically.
override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
DispatchQueue.main.async {
self.searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
}
}
This may depend on how you configure your SearchController. This is how I configure mine:
// Defined in class
let searchController = UISearchController(searchResultsController: nil)
// Called in viewDidLoad
navigationItem.searchController = searchController
searchController.searchResultsUpdater = self
searchController.searchBar.scopeButtonTitles = ["A", "B"]
searchController.searchBar.delegate = self
searchController.obscuresBackgroundDuringPresentation = false
Alternative Approach
This answer looks at a number of issues related to this occurrence and explains the debugging logic used to isolate and determine the
specific cause of the problem in my case. Along the way, I share other
possibilities that might have worked in other situations and explain
why this works in my situation.
tldr; Look at the self.definesPresentationContext = true, the
isBeingDismissed, isBeingPresented, canBecomeFirstResponder, and
delegate assignment of the SearchController, the Searchbar,
SearchResultsUpdater and their delegate methods.
(Source of self.definesPresentationContext solution - See SO answer)
One thing to keep in mind is the context of how the SearchBar is being presented. Embedded in a toolbar, navigation bar, another UIView, as an input or input accessory view. All of which, I've found to have some impact on the timing and internal animation of the search bar as it is being presented or dismissed.
I've attempted all of the solutions presented and none of these worked until I reconsidered how I was trying to use the searchBar. In my case, I was pushing a controller (B) with a search controller from a controller (A) that already had an initial searchcontroller on it. I programmatically embedded each of the search controllers within the titleView of my navigation item when doing a pull refresh.
The answers suggesting adding searchbar.becomeFirstResponder() into the life cycle didn't make sense for my use-case since the view was fully loaded by the time I wanted to insert and display my search bar into the navigationItem. The logic also seemed confusing since the view controller lifecycle methods should already be operating on the main thread. Adding a delay to the presentation also seemed to be an interference with the internal operations of the display and animation used by the system.
I found that calling my function to toggle the insertion worked when I pushed the view controller from controllerA but the keyboard would not display properly when pushed from controllerB. The difference between these two situations was that controllerA was a static tableview controller and controllerB had a tableview controller that I had made searchable by adding its own search controller.
e.g. controllerA with searchbar segues to controllerB with searchbar
Using a number of breakpoints and examining the status of the searchController and the searchbar at different points I was able to determine that the searchController.canBecomeFirstResponder was returning false. I also found that I needed to set the SearchResultsUpdater to self and the delegates on both the searchController and the searchBar.
I finally noted that setting self.definesPresentationContext = true on controllerA was not allowing the keyboard to be displayed when I pushed controllerB onto the navigation stack. My solution was to move the self.definesPresentationContext = true to viewDidAppear on controllerA and in the prepare(for:sender:) method of controllerA I change it to self.definesPresentationContext = false when the destination is controllerB. This resolved the keyboard display issue in my case.
A word on animation ~ I've found that when assigning things to the navigationItem or navigationBar, the system has some built in timing and default animations. I avoid adding custom animation, code in moveToParent methods, or delayed presentations because unexpected behavior occurs in many cases.
Why this solution works
Apple documentation on definesPresentationContext indicates the default behavior and notes some situations where this context adjusts the behavior the controller assigned to manage the keyboard appearance. In my case controllerA was assgined to manage the presentation rather than controllerB, so I just changed that behavior by adjusting this value:
When using the currentContext or overCurrentContext style to present a
view controller, this property controls which existing view controller
in your view controller hierarchy is actually covered by the new
content. When a context-based presentation occurs, UIKit starts at the
presenting view controller and walks up the view controller hierarchy.
If it finds a view controller whose value for this property is true,
it asks that view controller to present the new view controller. If no
view controller defines the presentation context, UIKit asks the
window’s root view controller to handle the presentation. The default
value for this property is false. Some system-provided view
controllers, such as UINavigationController, change the default value
to true.
This is what it worked for me in Swift 4
override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
searchController.isActive = true
DispatchQueue.main.async{
self.searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
}
}
The answer is to call becomeFirstResponder in viewDidAppear.
override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
searchBar?.becomeFirstResponder()
}
Based on #mislovr's solution, the 0.1 delay was not long enough. Here is my updated code to that answer.
func presentSearchController() {
searchController.isActive = true
Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: 0.1, repeats: true) { [weak searchController] timer in
guard let searchController = searchController else {
timer.invalidate()
return
}
if searchController.searchBar.canBecomeFirstResponder {
searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
timer.invalidate()
}
}
}
i fixed this as follows:
override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
searchController.isActive = true
}
func didPresentSearchController(_ searchController: UISearchController) {
DispatchQueue.main.async {
searchController.searchBar.searchTextField.becomeFirstResponder()
}
}
What happens is as soon as the view appears you set your searchControllers 'isActive' property to true. This fires the delegate method called didPresentSearchController. when that fires it means that searchcontroller is visible and thus can become first responder.
I think there might be a cleaner solution. I found that the keyboard was sort of 'blipping' up and then back down when presented, and calling becomeFirstResponder in didPresentSearchController: was working, but the keyboard was coming in late, and the animation was a bit quirky.
Wrapping my reload data method with a check for presentation made everyone happy:
- (void)updateSearchResultsForSearchController:(UISearchController *)searchController
{
if (!searchController.isBeingPresented && !searchController.isBeingDismissed) {
[self.collectionView reloadData];
}
}
I found this by setting a breakpoint in resignFirstResponder. resignFirstResponder was being called from the reloadData, which in turn was called by updateSearchResultsForSearchController:. It turns out that updateSearchResultsForSearchController: is called during the presentation of the search controller. If you muck with the view hierarchy that the UISearchBar is in during this time, the search controller gets borked. My guess is that the reloadData call was causing the UICollectionReusableView header view to come out and go back into the view hierarchy and forcing the UISearchBar subview to resign first responder.
Another symptom I saw was the the search term was not resetting to the middle of the search bar on cancel, which caused it not to present properly on future clicks.
The solution of mixing #edwardmp and #mislovr answers kind of worked for me (keyboard pops out with a slight delay):
- (void)didPresentSearchController:(UISearchController *)searchController {
[self performSelector:#selector(showKeyboard) withObject:nil afterDelay:0.001];
}
- (void) showKeyboard {
[self.searchController.searchBar becomeFirstResponder];
}
I battled with this for a while but got it working by:
Initializing the searchController in viewDidLoad()
Setting active = true in viewDidAppear()
This triggers didPresentSearchController() in the UISearchControllerDelegate extension.
Setting searchBar.becomeFirstResponder() in didPresentSearchController()
Here's the full example, it uses Google Maps Autocomplete.
class myViewController: UIViewController {
// MARK: Variables
var resultsViewController: GMSAutocompleteResultsViewController?
var searchController: UISearchController?
var resultView: UITextView?
// MARK: Outlets
#IBOutlet var myView: UIView!
// MARK: View Methods
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
resultsViewController = GMSAutocompleteResultsViewController()
resultsViewController?.delegate = self
searchController = UISearchController(searchResultsController: resultsViewController)
searchController?.delegate = self
searchController?.searchResultsUpdater = resultsViewController
searchController?.searchBar.prompt = "Search for a Place"
searchController?.searchBar.placeholder = "place name"
searchController?.searchBar.text = ""
searchController?.searchBar.sizeToFit()
searchController?.searchBar.returnKeyType = .Next
searchController?.searchBar.setShowsCancelButton(true, animated: false)
myView.addSubview((searchController?.searchBar)!)
}
override func viewDidAppear(animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(true)
searchController?.active = true
}
// MARK: GMSAutocompleteResultsViewControllerDelegate Extension
extension myViewController: GMSAutocompleteResultsViewControllerDelegate {
func resultsController(resultsController: GMSAutocompleteResultsViewController,
didAutocompleteWithPlace place: GMSPlace) {
searchController?.active = false
// Do something with the selected place.
print("Place name: ", place.name)
print("Place address: ", place.formattedAddress)
print("Place attributions: ", place.attributions)
}
func resultsController(resultsController: GMSAutocompleteResultsViewController,
didFailAutocompleteWithError error: NSError){
// TODO: handle the error.
print("Error: ", error.description)
}
// Turn the network activity indicator on and off again.
func didRequestAutocompletePredictionsForResultsController(resultsController: GMSAutocompleteResultsViewController) {
UIApplication.sharedApplication().networkActivityIndicatorVisible = true
}
func didUpdateAutocompletePredictionsForResultsController(resultsController: GMSAutocompleteResultsViewController) {
UIApplication.sharedApplication().networkActivityIndicatorVisible = false
}
}
extension myViewController: UISearchControllerDelegate {
func didPresentSearchController(searchController: UISearchController) {
self.searchController?.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
}
}
}
In Objective C:
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
// Setup your SearchViewController here...
}
- (void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated {
[super viewDidAppear:animated];
// Will show Cancel button in White colour
[[UIBarButtonItem appearanceWhenContainedInInstancesOfClasses:#[[UISearchBar class]]] setTintColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
// searchController.active = YES; // This is not necessary
// set SearchBar first responder inside Main Queue block
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
[self->searchController.searchBar becomeFirstResponder];
});
}
Swift 5
class ViewController {
override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
// Only after viewDidAppear searchController can be activated
searchController?.isActive = true
}
}
extension ViewController: UISearchControllerDelegate {
// didPresentSearchController not work for me
func presentSearchController(_ searchController: UISearchController) {
searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
}
}
To me, there’s a quite big lag when using viewDidAppear. It can be better to use becomeFirstResponder asynchronously in viewDidLoad (tested with iOS 10, Swift 3):
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
DispatchQueue.main.async {
searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
}
}
This is what it worked for me in Swift 3.
override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
self.perform(#selector(self.showKeyboard), with: nil, afterDelay: 0.1)
}
func showKeyboard() {
self.searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
}
Define searchBar.
SearchBar textfield "searchField" choice.
viewDidLoad or viewWillAppear call code.
#IBOutlet weak var searchBar: UISearchBar!
let textFieldUISearchBar = searchBar.value(forKey: "searchField") as? UITextField
textFieldUISearchBar?.becomeFirstResponder()
Related
I am using UISearchController in a Large header style. But when I push to the next view controller and coming back to the same controller again my UIView hides by navigation bar.
See Video
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1tb5Eeni-79uomBGl1GPEcESDSYOfrZ7v
I can't reproduce your error, but I'll post my test code, as it can help you.
I suggest that you write this code in a BaseViewController: UIViewController and extend it in your ViewControllers for define Large Titles:
self.navigationController?.navigationBar.prefersLargeTitles = true
Define your UISearchController and set your Instance.
var resultSearchController: UISearchController!
resultSearchController = UISearchController(searchResultsController: nil)
resultSearchController.searchResultsUpdater = self
tableView.tableHeaderView = resultSearchController.searchBar
Finally, you can try to close the Search keyboard when the screen disappears, like this:
override func viewDidDisappear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidDisappear(animated)
resultSearchController.searchBar.endEditing(true)
}
Hope this helps.
Adding following line in viewwillappear resolves my issue
extendedLayoutIncludesOpaqueBars = true
I have a BaseViewController and a SideMenu that uses my MenuViewController. There are many possible "Home" screens that all inherit from this same BaseViewController. MenuViewController also inherits from BaseViewController.
I would like an overlay to be shown on the home screen and then disappear when the Menu is no longer in focus. So far, I can only get the overlay to show, but not disappear.
The overlay disappears if I tap one of the menu items, which performs a segue to the appropriate subclass of BaseViewController (for example, the Home screen or Settings screen). This effectively refreshes the screen, and I think I could keep a reference to the caller and segue back to it if I can't find a better solution.
Things I have tried:
overlay.removeFromSuperview()
view.sendSubview(toBack: overlay)
overlay.isHidden = true
overlay.alpha = 0.0
Moving hideOverlay() into MenuViewController.
Using super.overlay within MenuViewController instead of simply overlay or self.overlay.
I can confirm that all lines of code are hit with breakpoints, but the overlay view does not go away. BaseViewController's viewWillAppear() is not called when I tap to make the menu go away, because its subclass is already in view (just pushed to the side a bit).
Here is a minimal reproducible example:
BASE VIEW CONTROLLER
import UIKit
import SideMenu
class BaseViewController: UIViewController {
let overlay = UIView()
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
// Setup
overlay.frame = self.view.frame
overlay.backgroundColor = UIColor.clear
overlay.alpha = 0.5
overlay.isUserInteractionEnabled = false
overlay.autoresizingMask = [.flexibleWidth, .flexibleHeight]
view.addSubview(overlay)
}
// WORKS
func showMenu() {
// menuLeftNavigationController is MenuViewController.
self.present(SideMenuManager.menuLeftNavigationController!, animated: true) {
UIView.animate(withDuration: 0.2) {
self.overlay.backgroundColor = Constants.Colors.overlayColor // Already defined.
}
// PROBLEM IS HERE
func hideOverlay() {
UIView.animate(withDuration: 0.2) {
self.overlay.backgroundColor = UIColor.clear
self.overlay.setNeedsLayout()
self.overlay.layoutIfNeeded()
self.view.setNeedsLayout()
self.view.layoutIfNeeded()
}
}
}
MENU VIEW CONTROLLER
import UIKit
import SideMenu
class MenuViewController: BaseViewController, UITableViewDataSource, UITableViewDelegate {
#IBOutlet weak var tableView: UITableView!
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
// Tableview boilerplate
}
override func viewWillAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewWillAppear(animated)
tableView.reloadData()
}
// BREAKPOINTS CONFIRM THIS CODE EXECUTES.
override func viewWillDisappear(_ animated: Bool) {
self.hideOverlay()
}
}
In viewWillDisappear when you call self.hideOverlay, you're calling that on your MenuViewController.
When showMenu() is called, you present the MenuViewController and then set the overlay background colour on the presenting view controller.
I guess, what you want to do here is in the completion of the MenuViewController, dismiss method do:
if let presentingViewController = self.presentingViewController as? BaseViewController {
presentingViewController.hideOverlay()
}
Hopefully that makes sense?
I implemented a search bar inside a navigation controller, it's working fine but the cancel button tap delegate method is not being called. Please help:
func searchBarCancelButtonClicked(_ searchBar: UISearchBar) {
//This function is not being called
}
let searchBarCnt = UISearchController(searchResultsController: nil)
navigationItem.searchController = searchBarCnt
navigationItem.hidesSearchBarWhenScrolling = true
self.navigationController?.view.backgroundColor = UIColor.white
searchBarCnt.delegate = self
searchBarCnt.searchBar.delegate = self
The function delegate is not being called because you are missing the definesPresentationContext:
Determines which parent view controller's view should be presented over for presentations of type
UIModalPresentationCurrentContext. If no ancestor view controller has this flag set, then the presenter
will be the root view controller.
you may enable such flag in this way:
import UIKit
class ViewController: UIViewController, UISearchBarDelegate {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.navigationItem.searchController = UISearchController(searchResultsController: nil)
self.navigationItem.searchController?.searchBar.delegate = self
self.definesPresentationContext = true
}
func searchBarCancelButtonClicked(_ searchBar: UISearchBar) {
print("searchBarCancelButtonClicked")
}
}
Note:
without definesPresentationContext, you are not really touching the cancel button (when you try to touch it), you are just dismissing the context (you may notice a "silent" glitch in the background focus), suchlike
a popover is being dismissed.
When you click the Cancel button which appears next to search bar delegate method won't be called.
Try to click on search button on keyboard and check whether cancel button delegate method is getting called or not
I have a ViewController called SourceViewController that is embedded in a NavigationController.
SourceViewController segues to DestinationViewController upon UITableViewCell selection.
I want to hide the navigation bar on SourceViewController, but display it on DestinationViewController in order to show the Back button.
So, in SourceViewController:
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.navigationController?.navigationBar.hidden = true
}
And in DestinationViewController:
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.navigationController?.navigationBar.hidden = false
}
However, when I tap "Back" in DestinationViewController to return to SourceViewController, the navigationBar reappears in SourceViewController
The next 'obvious' step would be to set navigationBar.hidden = false in viewDidAppear in SourceViewController, however this smells for many reasons: mainly DRYness but also when returning to SourceViewController, there is a delay in hiding the navigationBar, and it is visible for a split second.
How do I solve this problem?
I think this will work, hiding the navigation bar. before appearing/disappearing the view.
override func viewWillAppear(animated: Bool) {
navigationController?.navigationBarHidden = true
super.viewWillAppear(animated)
}
override func viewWillDisappear(animated: Bool) {
navigationController?.navigationBarHidden = true
super.viewWillDisappear(animated)
}
Check ViewController lifecycle Looking to understand the iOS UIViewController lifecycle .
When you start the program viewDidLoad is called and everything is ok, but when you go back from detailController, viewDidLoad is not called, just change this line (self.navigationController?.navigationBar.hidden = true) in viewWillApear and everything must be ok.
I've added a UISearchController to my application and set it's searchBar to the titleView of my navigationItem.
This works but I am seeing the cancel button despite having set showsCancelButton to false.
searchController = UISearchController(searchResultsController: searchResultsController)
searchController.searchResultsUpdater = searchResultsUpdater
// Configure the searchBar
searchController.searchBar.placeholder = "Find Friends..."
searchController.searchBar.sizeToFit()
searchController.searchBar.showsCancelButton = false
self.definesPresentationContext = true
navigationItem.titleView = searchController.searchBar
I agree, it seems like a bug. The problem is that the searchController keeps resetting the showsCancelButton property of the searchBar. I found a solution that involves:
subclassing UISearchBar to ignore setShowsCancelButton.
to make the searchController use that subclass, you have to subclass UISearchController.
And then you find that the searchBar is not triggering the search controller's delegate methods, so you have to trigger them separately...
Convoluted, but it seems to do the trick. You can find the full answer here.
This appears to be a bug in iOS. The same behavior I've described can be seen in the example project supplied by Apple
https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/samplecode/TableSearch_UISearchController/Introduction/Intro.html
The documentation states that the default for this is NO but this doesn't seem to be the case. Setting showsCancelButton to NO seems to have no effect.
I have filed a radar for this and am waiting to hear back.
Easy solution in Swift3 - we need to make CustomSearchBar without cancel button and then override the corresponding property in new CustomSearchController:
class CustomSearchBar: UISearchBar {
override func setShowsCancelButton(_ showsCancelButton: Bool, animated: Bool) {
super.setShowsCancelButton(false, animated: false)
}}
class CustomSearchController: UISearchController {
lazy var _searchBar: CustomSearchBar = {
[unowned self] in
let customSearchBar = CustomSearchBar(frame: CGRect.zero)
return customSearchBar
}()
override var searchBar: UISearchBar {
get {
return _searchBar
}
}}
In MyViewController I initialize and configure searchController using this new custom subclass:
var mySearchController: UISearchController = ({
// Display search results in a separate view controller
// let storyBoard = UIStoryboard(name: "Main", bundle: Bundle.main)
// let alternateController = storyBoard.instantiateViewController(withIdentifier: "aTV") as! AlternateTableViewController
// let controller = UISearchController(searchResultsController: alternateController)
let controller = CustomSearchController(searchResultsController: nil)
controller.searchBar.placeholder = NSLocalizedString("Enter keyword (e.g. iceland)", comment: "")
controller.hidesNavigationBarDuringPresentation = false
controller.dimsBackgroundDuringPresentation = false
controller.searchBar.searchBarStyle = .minimal
controller.searchBar.sizeToFit()
return controller
})()
I had to correct by putting in a little hack...
Setting the alpha to 0.0 on viewDidLoad because he screen will flash.
Before you ask...willPresentSearchController will not work.
extension GDSearchTableViewController: UISearchControllerDelegate {
func didPresentSearchController(searchController: UISearchController) {
searchController.searchBar.setShowsCancelButton(false, animated: false)
searchController.searchBar.becomeFirstResponder()
UIView.animateWithDuration(0.1) { () -> Void in
self.view.alpha = 1.0
searchController.searchBar.alpha = 1.0
}
}
}
We wanted the search bar to have no Cancel button initially, but have it appear when the user tapped in the search bar.
Then we wanted the Cancel button to disappear if user tapped Cancel, or otherwise the search bar lost first responder.
What finally worked for me:
On create:
searchBar.showsCancelButton = NO;
We use a subclass of UISearchBar and override searchBarShouldBeginEditing thusly:
-(BOOL)searchBarShouldBeginEditing:(UISearchBar*)searchBar {
self.showsCancelButton = YES;
return YES;
}
We also override resignFirstReponder (in the UISearchBar subclass) thusly:
-(BOOL)resignFirstResponder
{
self.showsCancelButton = NO;
return [super resignFirstResponder];
}
I would also add
searchController.hidesNavigationBarDuringPresentation = false
searchController.delegate = self
searchController.searchBar.delegate = self
See if assigning those delegates will help.
I try to help you man but I'm not sure that I find the real problem.
According to Apple Documentation:
showsCancelButton
boolean property that indicating whether the cancel button is
displayed
But for hide the cancel button maybe you should use:
setShowsCancelButton(_:animated:)
I hope that can be helpful.
You can subclass UISearchBar and override method layoutSubviews
super.layoutSubviews()
self.showsCancelButton = false
my solution was to set the attribute every time anew when I used the searchcontroller respectively its searchbar. I initialized the searchcontroller lazily without setting the attribute and then did
searchController.searchBar.showsCancelButton = false
every time before search began.
You could do this in the UISearchControllerDelegate methods i.e...
This worked for me (iOS 10):
- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated {
[super viewWillAppear:animated];
self.searchController.searchBar.showsCancelButton = NO;
}
It may be helpful to note that this has changed on iOS 13 and quote Apple's documentation on showsCancelButton, currently only available on UISearchBar.h and not on developer.apple.com
/* New behavior on iOS 13.
If the search bar is owned by a UISearchController, then using the setter
for this property (as well as -setShowsCancelButton:animated:) will implicitly
set the UISearchController's automaticallyShowsCancelButton property to NO.
*/
automaticallyShowsCancelButton has been introduced on iOS 13.0 and should clarify what #pbasdf had already pointed out in his answer: that the buggy behavior is something intrinsic to UISearchController.
What about setting it with [searchBar setShowsCancelButton:NO animated:NO];
https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/documentation/UIKit/Reference/UISearchBar_Class/#//apple_ref/occ/instm/UISearchBar/setShowsCancelButton:animated: