iOS 8 Today Interface Builder - ios

I've programatically set the width and height of my Today widget, and those changes are reflected when I run my app on my phone. However in my storyboard, the height has not changed (so I can't really position objects properly).
How can I set the view size in IB? It doesn't let me change the width/height at the moment.
EDIT: This post is about how to set up the layout it in storyboard, not how to code the widget which I can do.

Select the view in IB, click the ruler icon (Size inspector?), then there's a height field that you can change to whatever you want

Related

iOS Storyboard: Different Layouts for Different Devices

As you can see, this is the different device previews for my current storyboard. The transparent green on the bottom is taken up by another view controller, but the spacing needs to be fixed for each different size class. I tried setting the width and height in the storyboard to the setting I want to change, but it changes that attribute for all the size classes. How can I just change, for example, the size of the Label at the top for ONLY 3.5in iPhones or the green layout for ONLY 5.5in iPhones?
Choose the pin of the label and go to Attributes Inspector of the Utility Area. You can find + button left to the constant text field.
When you tap the button, you can choose the size class you need.

Constraint issues ios- Swift

I am working an ios app using Xcode 7.0.1 and swift 2.0. I want to design app for all ios devices iphone's and ipad's. I am using wAny, hAny in storyboard. I use constraints also. One of my screen i have some buttons and i want to change height of buttons. I add my storyboard screenshot .
Now my problem here is i want all the buttons same width and height at initial stage after that i need to change height. So i use equal height constraints. Initially it is working. How can i change height of one Button using swift code.
Note: I am using view to place the buttons because it have label inside so.
You can connect constraint of the button (which will provide height to all other buttons) as IBOutlet.
And if you connected try this
baseButtonHeightConstraint.constant = 70.0 //for example
Click on the button that you want to change the height, In the size inspector which is on the right top, change the height and save it. Try running then.

Auto layout: Xcode 6: Centering UI elements

I'm using Interface Builder in Xcode 6 to make an app and am having trouble getting the text fields and button to centre on the screen for different size screens.
I thought it was a matter of selecting horizontal and vertical centering in container but it doesn't seem to be that when I try it in auto layout. Actually I've tinkered around a bit and I still haven't got it.
I just want to be able to see all of my button and text fields for any size iPhone screen and right now simulator is only showing part of these UI elements like this:
I also want to do this in storyboard and not in code as I'm not at the level of doing this in code yet.
Step 1: Make sure your size class covers all the iPhone screen at least in portrait view. So, change the size class to "wCompact hRegular".
Step 2: After setting the size class properly, add the UITextFields and UIButton to your storyboard. To me, it looks something like-
Step 3:
Before, you start adding constraints, you need to remember two things-
a. Your element(UITextField, UIButton, UIView or any component) needs to know its starting position unambiguously, and
b. Your element needs to know its size meaning, its height and width.
In this case, as you want to centre your elements, I am just assuming that it needs to be centred starting from 10 scale from the left edge and should end 10 scales away from the right edge of your iPhone screen. Now, that means, it's width will be different based on the screen size, but its height will be same.
So, I just add the constrains following way for the 1st text box-
Notice, in the size inspector, I set the text box's starting point, x and width in a way that it is 10 pt away from left edge and 10 pt away from the right edge. Don't worry, it's just simple math.
For the 2nd textField, I add the constrain, the same way-
Lastly, for the button, the constrains are following-
Now, you are good to go. Everything is centered.
By using your size class selector in the bottom of the storyboard window, set you sizes as any width and any height and then follow the below auto layout constrains. It will work for you.
First select the view you want to set the auto layout, and then select the pin option from the right bottom corner of your storyboard and then add the constrains as shown in above picture and click button Add 4 constrains
Repeat the process for all views and set the constrains as Fix the top, bottom, left and right constrains of all views except the last button that should be fix from top,left,right and fixed height.
You need to make use of the size class selector in the bottom of the storyboard window.
So for an iPhone 6 or 6 Plus in portrait you would choose a compact width and regular height like this:
And then you would do whatever auto layout stuff for the given device there

iOS - Change size of view in Interface Builder for putting into scrollview

Here is my problem:
I want to create a view whose height exceeds the height of the iPhone-screen. To deal with that, I am using a UIScrollView which works just fine. I created the scroll view in interface builder and set the content size programmatically to twice the height of the screen (that's enough for my purpose). I can run the code and it works just fine. I can scroll up an down without trouble.
The only thing I don't get is how I can add more items (buttons, labels etc.) to the view in interface builder, since it doesn't allow me to change the size of the view. I was thinking to create a scroll view as a top level object and then place a view (the contentview) of a larger height into it. Now the only thing to do is add all the items to the contentview, which is not possible because in interface builder the contentview has only its regular size.
I am thankful for any thoughts on this :-)
You can change the size of your UIView from the interface builder.
For that you have to go to Interface Builder of particular UIView. From Simulated Metrics *select Size = Freeform* and now you are able to change the size of UIView from interface builder.
The accepted answer is accurate but no longer complete for iOS7 and XCode5. Check out #Whasssaaahhh answer here for more detail.
You can drag items on top of the view in two ways.
1) Change Y-Position: If you select your UIView and in Size Inspector change its Y position to whatever section of the view you want to see (try something like -100 to go down or 100 to go up, play around with whatever numbers work for your screen size) you can drag all your buttons, labels, text fields however you like for each visible section.
2) Drag With Mouse: If you carefully select just the UIView with your mouse and carefully drag it either upwards or downwards and let go, it will snap to the new position so you can edit it. It's easier to "see" this if you drag some objects on it first.
You can change the size of your view and size of your scrollview along with the addition of objects.
add the added object height to the scrollView.contentSize and also add into the height of the view.

How to use UIScrollView in Storyboard

I have a scroll view with content that is 1000px tall and would like to be able to lay it out for easy design on the storyboard.
I know it can be done programmatically but I really want to be able to see it visually. Every time I put a scroll view on a view controller it won't scroll. Is it possible to get it to work like I want or do I have to do it in the code?
I'm answering my own question because I just spent 2 hours to find the solution and StackOverflow allows this QA style.
Start to finish here is how to make it work in storyboard.
1: go to you view controller and click on Attribute Inspector.
2: change Size to Freeform instead of Inferred.
3: Go to the main view on that storyboard, not your scrollview but rather the top level view.
4: Click Size Inspector and set this view to your desired size. I changed my height to 1000.
Now you will see that you storyboard has your view setup so you can see the entire height of your scroll for easy design.
5: Drop on a scrollview and stretch it so it takes up the whole view. You should now have a scrollview with size of 320,1000 sitting on a view in your view controller.
Now we need to make it scroll and need to make it show content correctly.
6: Click on your scrollview and click on Identity Inspector.
7: Add a User Defined runtime attribute with KeyPath of contentSize then type of SIZE and put in your content size. For me it is (320, 1000).
Since we want to see our whole scroll view on the storyboard we stretched it and it has a frame of 320,1000 but in order for this to work in our app we need to change the frame down to what the visible scrollview will be.
8: Add a runtime attribute with KeyPath frame with Type RECT and 0,0,320,416.
Now when we run our app we will have a visible scrollview has a frame of 0,0,320, 416 and can scroll down to 1000. We are able to layout our subviews and images and whatnot in Storyboard just the way we want them to appear. Then our runtime attributes make sure to display it properly. All of this without 1 line of code.
Here are the steps with Auto Layout that worked for me on XCode 8.2.1.
Select Size Inspector of View Controller, and change Simulated Size to Freeform with height 1000 instead of Fixed.
Rename the view of View Controller as RootView.
Drag a Scroll View as subview of RootView and rename it as ScrollView.
Add constraints for ScrollView:
ScrollView[Top, Bottom, Leading, Trailing] = RootView[Top, Bottom, Leading, Trailing]
Drag a Vertical Stack View as subview of ScrollView and rename it as ContentView.
Add constraints for ContentView:
ContentView.height = 1000
ContentView[Top, Bottom, Leading, Trailing, Width] = ScrollView[Top, Bottom, Leading, Trailing, Width]
Select Attributes Inspector of ContentView, and change Distribution to Fill Equally instead of Fill.
Drag a View as subview of ContentView and rename it as RedView.
Set Red as the background of RedView.
Drag a View as subview of ContentView and rename it as BlueView.
Set Blue as the background of BlueView.
Select RootView, and click Update Frames button.
Update Frames is a new button in Xcode8, instead of Resolve Auto Layout Issues button. It looks like a refresh button, located in the control bar below the Storyboard:
View hierarchy:
RootView
ScrollView
ContentView
RedView
BlueView
View Controller Scene (Height: 1000):
Run on iPhone7 (Height: 1334 / 2):
Here are the steps that worked for me on iOS 7 and XCode 5.
Drag a ViewController (it comes with UIView "View").
1.1 Select "View Controller" and select "File Inspector" and uncheck "Auto layout".
Drag a ScrollView (as child of ViewController's UIView "View")
Select ScrollView and open "Identity Inspector".
Enter "contentSize" for keyPath. Select "Size" for Type. And Enter {320, 1000} for value.
Note: Step 4 is simply saying that the scroller contains some content whose size is 320x1000 units. So setting contentSize will make scroller work.
Select View Controller, Select "Attributes Inspector" then select Freeform from Size.
Note: step 5 will allow us to change the size of "View" that the view controller comes with.
Select "View" and then select "Size Inspector".
Set Width to 320 and height to 1000.
Note: 5, 6 & 7 is purely for us to see stretched or entire expanded view inside StoryBoard.
Note: Make sure to unselect "Auto Layout" on View Controller.
Your View hierarchy should look like:
After hours of trial and error, I've found a very easy way to put contents into scrollviews that are 'offscreen'. Tested with XCode 5 & iOS 7. You can do this almost entirely in Storyboard, using 2 small tricks/workarounds :
Drag a viewcontroller onto your storyboard.
Drag a scrollView on this viewController, for the demo you can leave its size default,
covering the entire screen.
Now comes trick 1 : before adding any element to the scrollView, drag in a regular 'view' (This view will be made larger than the screen, and will contain all the sub elements like buttons, labels, ...let's call it the 'enclosing view').
Let this enclosing view's Y size in the size inspector to for example 800.
Drop in a label onto the enclosing view, somewhere at Y position 200, name it 'label 1'.
Trick 2 : make sure the enclosing view is selected (not the scrollView !), and set its Y position to for example -250, so you can add an item that is 'outside' the screen
Drop in a label, somewhere at the bottom of the screen, name it 'label 2'. This label is actually 'off screen'.
Reset the Y position of the enclosing view to 0, you'll no longer see label 2, as it was positioned off screen.
So far for the storyboard work, now you need to add a single line of code to the viewController's 'viewDidLoad' method to set the scrollViews contents so it contains the entire 'enclosing view'. I didn't find a way to do this in Storyboard:
- (void)viewDidLoad
{
[super viewDidLoad];
self.scrollView.contentSize = CGSizeMake(320, 800);
}
You can try doing this by adding a contentSize keyPath as a size to the scrollView in the Identity Inspector and setting it to (320, 1000).
I think Apple should make this easier in storyboard, in a TableViewController you can just scroll offscreen in Storyboard (just add 20 cells, and you'll see you can simply scroll), this should be possible with a ScrollViewController too.
Getting Scrolling to work in iOS7 and Auto-layout in iOS 7 and XCode 5.
In addition to this: https://stackoverflow.com/a/22489795/1553014
Apparently, all we need to do is:
Set all constraints to Scroll View (i.e. fix scroll view first)
Then set distance-from-scrollView constraint to the bottom most item to scroll view (which is the super view).
Note: Step 2 will tell storyboard where the last piece of content lies within Scroll view.
For this example, I have unchecked the Autolayout feature of the Interface builder. And, I'm still using (for no reason at all) the relatively old 4.6.1 version of Xcode.
Start with a view controller that has a scroll view over it (the main view).
1: Add a Container View, from the Object Library, to the scroll view. Notice that a new view controller is added to the storyboard and it is linked to the view controller with the scroll view.
2: Select the container view and, on the Size Inspector, make it anchor to top and left without auto resizing.
3: Change its height to 1000. (1000 is used for this example. You should apply the value that you require.)
4: Select the new view controller and, from the Attributes Inspector, change Size to Freeform.
5: Select the view of the new view controller and, on the size Inspector, change the height to 1000 (which is equal to the container view's height).
6: For your test later, while still on the view of the new view controller, add a label at the top and at the bottom of the view.
7: Select the scroll view from the original view controller. On the Identity inspector, add an attribute with the keyPath set to contentSize, type set to Size, and value set to {320, 1000} (or your container view's size).
8: Run on the 4-inch iPhone Simulator. You should be able to scroll from the top label up to the bottom label.
9: Run on the 3.5-inch iPhone Simulator. You should be able to scroll from the top label up to the bottom label.
Remember that Xcode 4.6.1 can only build for iOS6 and below. Using this approach and building for iOS6, I am still able to achieve the same results when the app is run on iOS7.
Note that within a UITableView, you can actually scroll the tableview by selecting a cell or an element in it and scrolling up or down with your trackpad.
For a UIScrollView, I like Alex's suggestion, but I would recommend temporarily changing the view controller to freeform, increasing the root view's height, building your UI (steps 1-5), and then changing it back to the standard inferred size when you are done so that you don't have to hard code content sizes in as runtime attributes. If you do that you are opening yourself up to a lot of maintenance issues trying to support both 3.5" and 4" devices, as well as the possibility of increased screen resolutions in the future.
Disclaimer :- Only for ios 9 and above (Stack View).
If you are deploying your app on ios 9 devices use a stack view.
Here are the steps :-
Add a scroll view with constraints - pin to left, right, bottom, top (without margins) to superview (view)
Add a stack view with same constraints to scroll view.
Stack View Other Constraints :- stackView.bottom = view.bottom and stackView.width = scrollView.width
Start adding your views. The scroll view will decide to scroll based on the size of the stack view (which is essentially your content view)
Here's how to setup a scrollview using Xcode 11
1 - Add scrollview and set top,bottom,leading and trailing constraints
2 - Add a Content View to the scrollview, drag a connection to the Content Layout Guide and select Leading, Top, Bottom and Trailing. Make sure to set its' values to 0 or the constants you want.
3 - Drag from the Content View to the Frame Layout Guide and select Equal Widths
4 - Set a height constraint constant to the Content View
i wanna put my 5 cents to accepted answer:
i've been researching topic for 2 days and finally found a solution that i will be using always from now on
go up to item 4 in accepted answer and forget about adding attributes of frames and contentsizes and so on
to make everything automatic just use solution from this link
everything is clear, easy, elegant and works like a charm on ios 7. i'm pretty glad with all that lol
You should only set the contentSize property on the viewDidAppear, like this sample:
- (void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated{
[super viewDidAppear:animated];
self.scrollView.contentSize=CGSizeMake(306,400.0);
}
It solve the autolayout problems, and works fine on iOS7.
Here is a simple solution.
Set the size attribute of your view controller in the storyboard to "Freeform" and set the size you want. Make sure it's big enough to fit the full content of your scroll view.
Add your scroll view and set the constraints as you normally would. i.e. if you wants the scroll view to be the size of your view, then attach your top, bottom, leading, trailing margins to the superview as you normally would.
Now just make sure there are constraints in the subviews of the scrollview that connect the top and bottom of the scroll view. Same for left and right if you have horizontal scrolling.
In iOS7 I found that if I had a View inside a UIScrollView on a FreeForm-sized ViewController it would not scroll in the app, no matter what I did. I played around and found the following seemed to work, which uses no FreeForms:
Insert a UIScrollView inside the main View of a ViewController
Set the Autolayout constraints on the ScrollView as appropriate. For me I used 0 to Top
Layout guide and 0 to Bottom layout Guide
Inside the ScrollView, place a Container View. Set its height to whatever you want (e.g. 1000)
Add a Height constraint (1000) to the Container so it doesn't resize. The bottom will be past the end of the form.
Add the line [self.scrollView setContentSize:CGSizeMake(320, 1000)]; to the ViewController that contains the scrollView (which you've hooked up as a IBOutlet)
The ViewController (automatically added) that is associated with the Container will have the desired height (1000) in Interface Builder and will also scroll properly in the original view controller. You can now use the container's ViewController to layout your controls.
Here's a bit of a grubby answer that get's to the same solution for vertical scroll views, but (against the ethos of stackoverflow) doesn't answer the question. Instead of using a scrollView, just use a UITableView, drag a normal UIView into the header, and make it as big as you want, you can now scroll the content in storyboard.
Apparently you don't need to specify height at all! Which is great if it changes for some reason (you resize components or change font sizes).
I just followed this tutorial and everything worked: http://natashatherobot.com/ios-autolayout-scrollview/
(Side note: There is no need to implement viewDidLayoutSubviews unless you want to center the view, so the list of steps is even shorter).
Hope that helps!
The key is the contentSize.
This is often missing and not indicated when adding a UIScrollView.
Select the UIScrollView and select the Identity Inspector.
Add a contentSize keyPath as a size to the scrollView in the Identity Inspector and setting it to (320, 1000).
Scroll away.
If you are using auto-layout than best approach is to use UITableViewController with static cells in storyboard.
I have also once faced the problem with a view that require much more scrolling so change the UIScrollView with above mentioned technique.

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