UITabBarController tabbar item shows only when selected - ios

My project is in Xcode 5.0.2 and since I've upgraded to OS X 10.10 I can't use Xcode 5.0.2 now and I need to use Xcode 6 but my problem is my tabbar items in xib file only shows when they're selected(Once selected the image with load and will not hide when unselected).here's the screenshot of it on first load.
Note: I'm using an old UITabBarController usign xib

The solution is only [self setNeedsToDisplay] :D My layout is not updating. Thanks for the help guys :D

In ViewController of every tab add the below code with there respective title and image.
- (id)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibNameOrNil bundle:(NSBundle *)nibBundleOrNil
{
self = [super initWithNibName:nibNameOrNil bundle:nibBundleOrNil];
if (self)
{
self.tabBarItem.title = #"Dashboard";
self.tabBarItem.image = [[UIImage imageNamed:#"dashBoard"]imageWithRenderingMode:UIImageRenderingModeAlwaysOriginal ];
self.tabBarItem.selectedImage=[[UIImage imageNamed:#"dashBoardSelect"]imageWithRenderingMode:UIImageRenderingModeAlwaysOriginal];
}
return self;
}

Related

"contentSizeForViewInPopover" - what does this do?

This is both a question, and a solution.
I recently added a very simple UIViewController with a .xib to my iPad application, containing just a UIDatePicker and a UILabel, which I wish to display as a popup in my iPad app.
I added all of the relevant code to display this .xib as a popup. There were no errors or warnings, my UIViewController class was set as the "Class" for this .xib, and both controls showed that they were linked to the IBOutlets in this particular file.
But, when I ran the app, the popup would appear perfectly well, but if I tried to access anything to do with these two controls, nothing would happen.
So, for example, the following code attempted to set the label's text, to change the UIDatePicker's mode... and nothing would happen. I tried breakpoints, the code WAS being run, the controls did have a value (they weren't nil) but this code wouldn't do anything. The UILabel's text wouldn't be changed, the DatePicker would continue to be in "Date & Time" mode, etc.
- (id)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibNameOrNil bundle:(NSBundle *)nibBundleOrNil
{
self = [super initWithNibName:nibNameOrNil bundle:nibBundleOrNil];
if (self) {
// Custom initialization
[self.datePicker addTarget:self action:#selector(LabelChange:) forControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
self.lblQuestion.text = #"Is this working...?";
self.datePicker.datePickerMode = UIDatePickerModeDate;
self.datePicker.date = [NSDate date];
}
return self;
}
Eventually - eventually - I added one line of code, to set the "contentSizeForViewInPopover":
- (id)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibNameOrNil bundle:(NSBundle *)nibBundleOrNil
{
self = [super initWithNibName:nibNameOrNil bundle:nibBundleOrNil];
if (self) {
// Without this line of code, the code-behind doesn't communicate
// with the controls in this .xib
self.contentSizeForViewInPopover = self.view.bounds.size;
// ... etc ...
...and suddenly, it worked beautifully.
So, my question is.. why ?!
What the heck does this one line of code do, which suddenly makes it so I can set my UILabel's text, and can talk to the UIDatePicker control...?
I'm very used to the quirks and crashes with XCode, but I'm baffled by why this suddenly made my code start to work. I'm relieved that this quirk "only" wasted a couple of hours of my life... and would like to understand the reason behind it.
Btw, this is with XCode 4.6.3, running on an iOS 6.1 SDK app for an iPad.
The outlets are connected when the nib is loaded. The nib is loaded when you access the controllers's view for the first time.
In other words, in your initializer all your outlets are nil. However, if you call self.view, your view gets loaded and outlets are connected. contentSizeForViewInPopover or bounds.size is irrelevant.
self = [super initWithNibName:nibNameOrNil bundle:nibBundleOrNil];
if (self) {
self.view; //this is enough
...
This is why you shouldn't put such code into initializer but into viewDidLoad instead.
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[self.datePicker addTarget:self
action:#selector(LabelChange:)
forControlEvents:UIControlEventValueChanged];
self.lblQuestion.text = #"Is this working...?";
self.datePicker.datePickerMode = UIDatePickerModeDate;
self.datePicker.date = [NSDate date];
}

Setting delegate to MKMapView

I am new to iOS programming. I have created ViewController with MKMapView element, and I wanted to set delegate [mapView setDelegate:self]
First I done it in method initWithNibName:bundle: like:
- (id)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibNameOrNil bundle:(NSBundle *)nibBundleOrNil
{
self = [super initWithNibName:nibNameOrNil bundle:nibBundleOrNil];
if (self) {
[[self map] setDelegate:self]];
UITabBarItem *item = [[UITabBarItem alloc] init];
[item setTitle:#"Map"];
[self setTabBarItem:item];
}
return self;
}
In this case MKMapView did not send me any messages, but when I placed setting delegate message to viewDidLoad method, it worked fine.
Could someone explain me why it was not working when setting delegate message was in initWithNibName:bundle?
Views do not get loaded in initWithNibName, it just initializes your viewcontroller class and load the xib file which contains your view details.
When viewcontroller calls viewDidLoad, you will have all your view objects allocated and initialized.
In your case, when you setDelegate in initWithNibname, you are calling it on a nil value, so nothing get set, but in viewDidLoad mapView is allocated and initialized, so it works fine.
For a deeper insight refer:
http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#featuredarticles/ViewControllerPGforiPhoneOS/ViewLoadingandUnloading/ViewLoadingandUnloading.html
Beautiful explanation here: What is the process of a UIViewController birth (which method follows which)?
Looking to understand the iOS UIViewController lifecycle
http://thejoeconwayblog.wordpress.com/2012/10/04/view-controller-lifecycle-in-ios-6/
This line is your problem:
[self map]
In initWithNibName the map is not yet initialized and it returns nil.
In viewDidLoad the map is already initialized.

proper way to set badge value on uninstantiated view controller?

I have 2 view controllers in a tab bar controller. My 2nd Nav Controller wants to set a badge value.
This controller is not loaded when the app starts, so the badge does not show. If I go over to that tab, the badge is properly updated.
this snippet runs when the tab's View Controller loads/reloads/updates/etc...
[self.navigationController.tabBarItem setBadgeValue:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"%u",[self.photos count]]];
Is the correct way to do this: Override the Nav Controller with a custom class and put the badge value in at that level? It seems like that is where I should put this info, but I haven't found a definite answer.
When the TabBarController is loaded, all of it's contained initial viewControllers are initialised. But their views are not loaded until you navigate to the respective tab item. So you can't execute code at this point in any of the view-loading methods (viewDidLoad etc). However you can execute code by overriding one of the initialisation methods.
If using storyboards the process of unarchiving the viewController triggers this method when the NIB has loaded:
- (void) awakeFromNib
{
}
If not using Storyboards, this initialiser is called prior to NIB loading:
- (id)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibNameOrNil bundle:(NSBundle *)nibBundleOrNil
{
self = [super initWithNibName:nibNameOrNil bundle:nibBundleOrNil];
if (self) {
// Custom initialization
}
return self;
}
In either case you can override these methods to execute some code...
- (void) awakeFromNib
[super awakeFromNib];
[self.navigationController.tabBarItem
setBadgeValue:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"badgeValue"]]];
}
- (id)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibNameOrNil bundle:(NSBundle *)nibBundleOrNil
{
self = [super initWithNibName:nibNameOrNil bundle:nibBundleOrNil];
if (self) {
[self.navigationController.tabBarItem
setBadgeValue:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"badgeValue"]]];
}
return self;
}
However you will need to take care where you are getting your data from. At this point self.photos may be uninitialised for example. If the data for this is coming out of userdefaults, you should be able to read those in here and set your badge accordingly.

How to change default title of the UITabBarItem

I want to use standard tab bar item with custom title. I change title after TabBarItem creating directly self.tabBarItem.title = #"Liked". For example "Favorites" - UITabBarSystemItemFavorites:
- (id)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibNameOrNil bundle:(NSBundle *)nibBundleOrNil
{
self = [super initWithNibName:nibNameOrNil bundle:nibBundleOrNil];
if (self) {
self.title = NSLocalizedString(#"Liked", #"Liked");
self.tabBarItem = [[UITabBarItem alloc] initWithTabBarSystemItem:UITabBarSystemItemFavorites tag:0];
self.tabBarItem.title = #"Liked";
}
return self;
}
Can I do this? If yes, where I made mistake?
UPD: Changing tab bar item title in the viewDidLoad() works on iOS4 but doesn't work on iOS5. Does exist another approach?
Thanks
You should do that in the viewDidLoad and not in the init.
As per Swift5.1 and Xcode the title and image of the system tab bar items cannot be changed. They are defined as enum in obj c as follow. This is the list:
typedef enum UITabBarSystemItem : NSInteger {
case more, favorites, featured, topRated, recents, contacts, history, bookmarks, search, downloads ,mostRecent, mostViewed
} UITabBarSystemItem;
This has a reason. Some icons are immediately recognisable across the whole iOS ecosystem and mean the same thing to everyone, therefore it is not possible to use them differently.
In this way Apple creates a better user experience.
You cannot use the Apple icon and use a different title. You could use a custom icon and custom title instead or in the Storyboards select an SF Symbol like this:

Please explain me why I can't set this UIButton hidden

Please explain me why:
[inboxB setHidden:YES];
NSLog(#"is hidden ? %i", [inboxB isHidden]); // gives 0
inboxB is an outlet. I'm inside this initializer:
- (id)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibNameOrNil bundle:(NSBundle *)nibBundleOrNil
{
self = [super initWithNibName:nibNameOrNil bundle:nibBundleOrNil];
if (self) {
...
thanks
Most likely inboxB is nil at the time when you set it.
Messages to nil fail silently and (almost) always return 0. So your code would look like:
[nil setHidden:YES]; // Does nothing
[nil isHidden]; // Returns 0 or 'NO'
If it's an outlet, check to make sure you've connected it to something.
I've run into this problem a few times with getters, I believe you need to access the property directly which calls isHidden which I believe is a private method.
Try:
indoxB.hidden;

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