Checking what storyboard (or view) the user is currently in - ios

I am building an app with multiple table views inside it that acess PDF's which share filenames. For example I have a Storyboard A with "PDF1" and storyboard B with "PDF1" also. Changing the names of the PDF's dosent really make sense based on what I have done and the way the app works. Basically i am looking for a way to check what view the user is in? (or maybe it is called a view im not sure). What I am looking for is something like this.
if (storyboardid == "StoryBoardA")
{
//load PDF from folderA
}
if (storyboardid == "StoryBaordB")
{
//load PDF from folderB
}
I couldnt find any attributes that do something like this so any ideas are appreciated. Thank you!

Yeah, I don't see any obvious way to identify the storyboard, so until you find something better, here's a round about way of doing it. First drag out a new View Controller onto each storyboard. Under the identity inspector set the "Storyboard ID" to "OrphanVC". Under the attributes inspector set the "Title" to "StoryboardA" or "StoryboardB". Once you have an orphaned view controller set up in each storyboard, you can check which storyboard you are in with code like this
UIViewController *orphan = [self.storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:#"OrphanVC"];
if ( [orphan.title isEqualToString:#"StoryboardA"] )
NSLog( #"This is storyboard A" );
else
NSLog( #"Must be storyboard B" );
Note that self.storyboard is a property in UIViewController, so this only works from within one of your view controller source files.

Related

Swift: How to know which Storyboard is active

I am trying to run a function only when a certain storyboard is active.
Example:
if view == secondStoryboard { //Don't know what to do here
functionOnSecondStoryboard("Test")
}
This may be a very simple fix, thanks for taking a look.
What do you mean by active storyboard? If I understand what you're trying to achieve, you can get the storyboard from which a view controller was instantiated using
let storyboard = self.storyboard
//now you can compare it to other storyboards
if storyboard == storyBoardNumberOne {
}
You can get its name with key-value coding and compare the string names
let name = storyboard?.valueForKey("name")
But be careful using the KVC to get the name - this isn't a documented feature and I cannot guarantee if an app using it would be accepted in the AppStore.

How do I get the Storyboard name?

Im creating a new design to my app so I have created a new story board. I need to support the older design for now, but I am designing the upcoming one on the fly. I am reusing some classes and ViewControllers. Is there a way to check the storyboard name in classes? For Example, if 'main' storyboard have the normal left bar button item, however if 'newDesign' do 'x'?
I cant find a way to get the 'UIStoryboard' name?
For example in pseudocode:
if(self.storyboard.name isEqualToString: #"Main"){
}else{
}
How about this?
UIStoryboard * storyboard1 = self.storyboard;
NSString *name=[storyboard1 valueForKey:#"name"];
NSLog(#"%#",name);
Another approach is to check the restoration ID of the view controllers. How about that?

Outlet in xcode (Newest version)

Well I am a big noob with xcode, and I have a question. Well basically, I keep watching tuts, about creating a outlet with a web browser or a image view, and all you do is open up the editor and ctrl + click/drag the "image view or web browser" into "view controller H" but every time I open up the editor and click my image or web browser it just goes to in the editor "UIViewConroller.H" and doesnt stay on "ViewController.h". I dont understand why its doing this and every tut i watch or read about, they say do this, and it's not working for me.
So, in your XCode, I assume you have it setup where you have:
A storyboard
Some sort of ViewControllers inside the storyboard
Some ViewController classes
What you need to do, is you need to make sure that the correct class is referenced inside your specific view controller in the storyboard!
Then, you will want to make sure that you select the Venn Diagram up top, representing a split view.
And then you want to make sure your pair window is set to automatic:
Let me know if it helps! PM Me if not.
You need to select class for your ViewController.
Select the ViewController >Open Utilities > Identity Inspector and make sure that the Class is ViewController

Manually pushed view controller freezes app

I am trying to manually push a view controller within my iOS 8 app. I have designed it in the Main.storyboard and i have already attached on it an specific identifier.
The code i am using is:
CustomViewController *vc =
[self.storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:#"CustomViewController"];
vc.customField1 = self.customField1;
vc.customField2 = self.customField2;
[self.navigationController pushViewController:vc animated:YES];
but that causes the app's freeze. It does not spit out any logs or something, so I cannot understand what might be wrong.
Can you help me a bit here?
Thank in advance
Do not do these two lines:
vc.customField1 = self.customField1;
vc.customField2 = self.customField2;
The problem here is that you're assigning one text field to be another text field (actually, you're making a text field reference refer to a completely different text field). Instead, copy the contents (e.g. the text) of the fields from your parent view controller to fields that already live in your new CustomViewController:
vc.customField1.text = self.customField1.text;
vc.customField2.text = self.customField2.text;
I'm thinking what is happening here is that the app is hanging when the new CustomViewController appears because it's trying to access fields in the now hidden / pushed-away parent view controller.

Loaded nib but the 'view' outlet was not set

I added a new nib file to my project, and tried to load it.
However, when I click on the toolbar icon that is supposed to take me to the view that I created, I get an NSInternalInconsistencyException with the message:
Terminating app due to uncaught exception
'NSInternalInconsistencyException', reason: '-[UIViewController
_loadViewFromNibNamed:bundle:] loaded the "..." nib but the view outlet was not set.'
So I opened up my nib file, and I see for the view that there are no referencing outlets set. However, I try to click and drag the circle for "new referencing outlet" to File's Owner, but it won't let me...what do I need to do to get my view to display?
Here's what worked for me:
Open the XIB file causing problems
Click on file's owner icon on the left bar (top one, looks like a yellow outlined box)
If you don't see the right-hand sidebar, click on the third icon above "view" in your toolbar. This will show the right-hand sidebar
In the right-hand sidebar, click on the fourth tab--the one that looks a bit like a newspaper
Under "Custom Class" at the top, make sure Class is the name of the ViewController that should correspond to this view. If not, enter it
In the right-hand sidebar, click on the last tab--the one that looks like a circle with an arrow in it
You should see "outlets" with "view" under it. Drag the circle next to it over to the "view" icon on the left bar (bottom one, looks like a white square with a thick gray outline
Save the xib and re-run
This is Josh Justice proposal, but in a graphical way (pictures are mine):
Select File owner
On right hand side panel select custom class.
Enter the custom class name
On right hand side panel select oultets
Drag view outlet to view component
Finally the View Controller is instantiated with the rolling code:
PTFilterUserVC *aFilterUserVC = [[PTFilterUserVC alloc] initWithNibName:#"FilterVC" bundle:nil];
//OPTIONAL.This is how 'I' am interested in present the view controller.
[self.navigationController pushViewController:aFilterUserVC animated:YES];
I can generally fix it by remaking the connection between File's Owner and the view. Control-drag from the File's owner to your View (in IB) and select view from the pop-up menu.
The View Identity - Class Identity was not set. After setting it to the appropriate class, the issue was resolved.
Are you sure you have a UIView (or subclass) assigned to the "view" property of yourViewController?
Right click on "File Owner" in the left pane of the xib for yourViewController and verify that the "view" outlet is set.
If not, set it to a view!
this will definetly fix the Issue
For me all the things stated here https://stackoverflow.com/a/6395750/939501 were true but still it was throwing error, reason was I created a View class with name ABCView and then deleted it later I added a view controller as ABCViewController so somehow it was referring to old ABCView in new view controller, I had to delete the ABCViewController and add a new one with different name that solved my issue.
Thanks
I had the same issue with XCode 4.6.3. I had started out with a couple files named MySettingsView.h and .m but deleted them in favor of MySettingsViewController.h, but despite trying most of the hints mentioned here, it still kept erroring with,
2013-07-05 11:48:17.205 MyApp[39024:c07] *** Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSInternalInconsistencyException', reason:
'-[UIViewController _loadViewFromNibNamed:bundle:] loaded the
"MySettingsView" nib but the view outlet was not set.'
It was evidently still "confused", trying to load MySettingsView.xib instead of MySettingsView Controller.xib. Maybe its "do what I mean" logic is too fancy.
So I worked around the problem by hardcoding the NIB/XIB name in MySettingsViewController.m:
- (id)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibNameOrNil bundle:(NSBundle *)nibBundleOrNil
{
self = [super initWithNibName:#"MySettingsViewController" bundle:nibBundleOrNil];
}
I ran into this problem in a slightly different way from the other answers here.
If I simply created a new xib file, added a UIViewController to it in Interface Builder, and set that UIViewController's custom class to my view controller, that resulted in the "view outlet was not set" crash. The other solutions here say to control-drag the view outlet to the View, but for me the view outlet was greyed out and I couldn't control-drag it.
I figured out that my mistake was in adding a UIViewController in Interface Builder. Instead, I had to add a UIView, and set the Custom Class of the File's Owner to my view controller. Then I could control-drag the view outlet of the File's Owner to my new view UIView and everything worked as it should.
To anyone that is using an xib method to create a UIView and having this problem, you will notice that you won't have the "view" outlet under the connections inspector menu. But if you set the File's Owners custom class to a UIViewController and then you will see the "view" outlet, which you can just CMND connect an outlet to the CustomView.
My issue with this was caused by having a duplicate nib in the class folder that did not have the view set. xcode seemed to be choosing one nib for a build and then the other the next time I built the project. Just deleted the other one. Looks good. Doh!
Just spent more than hour trying to find out why my view property is not set in my view controller upon initiating it from nib. Remember to call "[super initWithNibName...]" inside your view controller's initWithNibName.
I just fixed this in mine. Large project, two files. One was "ReallyLargeNameView" and another was "ReallyLargeNameViewController"
Based on the 2nd answer chosen above, I decided I should clean my build. Nada, but I was still suspect of XCode (as I have two identical classes, should abstract them but eh...) So one's working, one's not. File's owner names are so far as copy and pasted, outlets rehooked up, xCode rebooted, still nothing.
So I delete the similar named class (which is a view). Soon, new error "outlet inside not hooked up" literally was "webView not key value" blah... basically saying "Visual Studio's better". Anyway... I erase the smaller named file, and bam, it works.
XCode is confused by similar-named files. And the project is large enough to need rebooting a bit, that may be part of it.
Wish I had a more technical answer than "XCode is confused", but well, xCode gets confused a lot at this point. Unconfused it the same way I'd help a little kid. It works now, :) Should benefit others if the above doesn't fix anything.
Always remember to clean your builds (by deleting off the simulator too)
The previous answers almost solved the problem for me, but the last step was missing.
Create a xib and swift file with the same name.
Set the file owner to be the UIView subclass.
Drag an outlet from the View to the UIView subclass, name it "contentView"
Add this custom initializer so when the xib loads it attaches the contentView
required init?(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
Bundle(for: self.classForCoder).loadNibNamed("SampleView", owner: self, options: nil)
addSubview(contentView)
contentView.frame = self.bounds
contentView.autoresizingMask = [.flexibleHeight, .flexibleWidth]
}
Now any #IBOutlets you add will be attached.
Cheers,
Richard
I also had the same problem and my issue was that i added an other Localisation (English) to the ViewControllers nib so my App with the Localisation German couldĀ“t find the nib with the Localisation English!! Hope this helps anybody!
I had face the same problem while accidentally deleted xib reference and added it again.I just fixed by making connection between Files owner and the view.Also make sure that your FilesOwner's custom class is your expected viewController.
For me, the problem was caused by calling initWithNibName:bundle:. I am using table view cells from a nib file to define entry forms that sit on tableViews. As I don't have a view, doesn't make sense to hook to one. Instead, if I call the initWithStyle: method instead, and from within there, I load the nib file, then things work as expected.
I had the same problem, but a slightly different solution was called for. The problem in this case was the class of the File Owner, rather than the class of the View. To set this, I had to click the "backwards play" icon in the lower left corner of the Interface Builder window, and options then appeared that isolated the characteristics of the File Owner, the First Responder, and the View. Clicking on the first one (a large transparent box), enabled me to then set its custom class as suggested above.
I had the same problem, but a different solution was called for. The problem in this case was the class of the File Owner was not connected to xib file.
I ran into something very similar tonight, with a Swift UIViewController subclass. In this case, none of the above fixes worked, but reordering my code a bit did. Net-net, having an extension to the subclass occur before the subclass's definition itself in the same file seems to confuse XCode, despite compiling fine; the fix was to place the extensions after the subclass's definition.
I've posted the details in an answer to this similar question.
In my case , the designated initializer - (instancetype)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibNameOrNil bundle:(NSBundle *)nibBundleOrNil in ***ViewController class was implemented so even if when I call other initializer to initialize the object ,the designated initializer will be called .
So to resolve this problem checking wether the - (instancetype)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibNameOrNil bundle:(NSBundle *)nibBundleOrNil is also a proper way.
My problem was in wrong classes. I used custom .xib for my custom view.
Correctly it has to be set like here:
View shouldn't have a class
Class which is used with the .xib is set in File's Owner tab
Outlets are connected to File's Owner and not to the View.
Just had the same error in my project, but different reason. In my case I had an IBOutlet setup with the name "View" in my custom UITableViewController class. I knew "view" was special because that is a member of the base class, but I didn't think View (different case) would also be a problem. I guess some areas of Cocoa are not case-sensitive, and probably loading a xib is one of those areas. So I just renamed it to DefaultView and all is good now.
select the files owner and goto open the identity inspecter give the class name to which it corresponds to. If none of the above methods works and still you can't see the view outlet then give new referencing outlet Connection to the File's Owner then you can able to see the view outlet. Click on the view Outlet to make a connection between the View Outlet and File's owner. Run the Application this works fine.
In my case, the view was not viewed in xib.
in xib the View was size = none (4th tab right hand). I set size to Freeform and reload xCode.
view was appealed and I set the proper link to View.
If you have tried everything and you still get this error, try re-creating the class file from scratch but remember to select the "Also create XIB file" check box. This will auto link up a few items that are not linked when creating these files separately. After this is created, you can likely cut and paste everything onto the new XIB and it should work fine.
I am finding this issue specifically with creating files separately in Swift.
for me it happened, when
I have a ViewController class ( .mm/h ) associated with the Nib file,
UIView from this ViewController has to be loaded on the another view as a subview,
we will call something like this
-(void)initCheckView{
CheckView *pCheckViewCtrl = [CheckView instance];
pCheckView = [pCheckViewCtrl view];
[[self view]addSubview:pCheckView];
[pCheckViewCtrl performCheck];
}
Where
+(CheckView *)instance{
static CheckView *pCheckView = nil;
static dispatch_once_t checkToken;
dispatch_once(&checkToken, ^{
pCheckView = [[CheckView alloc]initWithNibName:#"CheckView" bundle:nil];
if ( pCheckView){
[pCheckView initLocal];
**[pCheckView loadView];**
}
});
return pCheckView;
}
Here loadView was missing,,, adding this line resolved my problem.
I had the same problem, I figured out and it is because of i had ticked "Static cells" in the properties of Table View under Content option. Worked when it changed to "Dynamic Prototypes". Screenshot is below.
I had a similar problem with Xcode 9.3, and setting "Module" under the "File Owner's" attribute inspector to the project module fixed this for me.
Open your storyboard file where your viewController exists, or XIB related file with textEdit.app and check if the storyboard or XIB name is the same of your viewController, then change it, save and reload/restart Xcode.
If you're using a custom init method, check that you're returning something valid. I ran into a piece of code that crashed on something like this:
- (id)init {
self = [super init];
if (self) {
CustomController *controller = [[NSBundle mainBundle] loadNibNamed:NSStringFromClass(className) owner:self options:nil];
} return self;
}
In another class, the controller was created like so:
CustomController *controller = [[CustomController alloc] init];
The problem is that in the init method, self hasn't changed and should look like this instead:
- (id)init {
self = [super init];
if (self) {
CustomController *controller = [[NSBundle mainBundle] loadNibNamed:NSStringFromClass(className) owner:self options:nil];
[controller viewDidLoad];
self = controller;
} return self;
}

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