I am using the following code in my appDelegate to set the appearance of my UINavigationBar and status bar throughout my app:
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setTintColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setTitleTextAttributes:#{NSForegroundColorAttributeName: [UIColor whiteColor]}];
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleLightContent];
This code correctly sets the appearance of everything to white everywhere except when a third-party modal viewController is prevented, such as from the Dropbox API or the Mail/Message viewController from a UIActivityViewController. I've included some screenshots to show how these are looking.
UIActivityViewController Mail:
UIActivityViewController Message:
Dropbox API:
I tried putting this in
[[UINavigationBar appearanceWhenContainedIn:[MFMailComposeViewController class], nil] setTitleTextAttributes:#{NSForegroundColorAttributeName: [UIColor whiteColor]}];
as well as
[[UINavigationBar appearanceWhenContainedIn:[UIActivityViewController class], nil] setTintColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
and neither one is working.
Like you, I've been trying to alter the appearance of UIActivityViewController and it's "sub" controllers. It seems that in iOS7 the appearance API is somewhat buggy. UIActivityViewController is probably a different process and for sure a separate window, so I'm not really surprised that it's troublesome to style it.
Anyway I found an interesting way around this issue, but your designers might not like it. Create a subclass of UIWindow (ex: MyWindow), instantiate it as your main window and every time you use appearance API use it like this:
[UINavigationBar appearanceWhenContainedIn:[MyWindow class], nil].barTintColor = [UIColor redColor];
This way you'll only style views that actually belong to your application and the Apple-provided views will remain white/blue. I guess it's not the solution you were looking for, but on the other hand it gives users a good understanding what is your app and what is system-provided ;)
In iOS 8 the UIActivityViewController presents its individual compose controllers on the root view controller of your application.
You need to subclass your root view controller (whether it be a UIViewController or UINavigationController) and add the following code.
#interface UINavigationControllerBarColor : UINavigationController
#end
#implementation UINavigationControllerBarColor
- (void)presentViewController:(UIViewController *)viewControllerToPresent animated:(BOOL)flag completion:(void (^)(void))completion {
[super presentViewController:viewControllerToPresent animated:flag completion:^{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleLightContent];
if (completion) {
completion();
}
}];
}
#end
and then instead of initializing a UINavigationController in the AppDelegate or storyboard, initialize your newly subclassed controller.
Some other recommendations subclass the UIActivityViewController but this does not work.
If you want to change the bar button and title colors as well use the following in your application:didFinishLaunching:
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setTintColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setTitleTextAttributes:[NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:
[UIColor whiteColor], UITextAttributeTextColor,
[UIFont systemFontOfSize:18.0f], UITextAttributeFont,
nil]];
[[UIBarButtonItem appearanceWhenContainedIn:[UINavigationBar class], nil] setTintColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
I've been struggling with this same issue for hours and my conclusion is that all activities from the UIActivityViewController may have their own style implementation and will look depending on that.
Basic problem: You can customise something to look ok for mail and messages, but other apps may look wrong. i.e: Facebook Messanger for some reason forces status bar to be light.
My recommendation: Create a subclass of UIWindow, use that subclass within your application and target UIAppearance to that window class and let the system's interfaces to just be :), (or with minor changes like tint color).
#interface MyWindow : UIWindow
#end
// further in code
[[UIBarButtonItem appearanceWhenContainedInInstancesOfClasses:#[[MyWindow class]]] setTintColor:[UIColor orangeColor]];
FYI: We have literally no control over status bar when using UIActivityViewController
Hope this helps.
Since there is no solution until now, I did the following to set the color of navigation bar of UIActivityViewController modal to white (as my app's navigation bar color is blue) so that the users can at least see the buttons:
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setBarTintColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
When the user is done with the UIActivityViewController modal, the app's main navigation bar color is returned to blue.
Hopefully somebody will post a better solution.
I found a solution to change the text color of the Send and Cancel buttons.
Check my answer from here.
Try this:
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setBarTintColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
I have the same problem and I used ActivityViewController's completion handler delegate to set back my bar Tint color to white with this line :
shareViewController.completionWithItemsHandler = ^(NSString *activityType, BOOL completed, NSArray *returnedItems, NSError *activityError) {
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setTitleTextAttributes:#{NSForegroundColorAttributeName:[UIColor whiteColor]}];
};
However this doesn't work anymore on iOS 8... They changed little bit the completion handler format, the code got executed but the color didn't change.
So in order not to waste all of my time here is my quick fix :
I am still changing the global color with this line just before showing the sharing controller (with comment for maintenance)
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setTitleTextAttributes:#{NSForegroundColorAttributeName:[UIColor darkGrayColor]}]; // Note : In ViewWillAppear the color is set back to white
In each view controller that are calling a UIActivityViewController, I am setting in the viewWillAppear method the code to get the color back.
- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[super viewWillAppear:animated];
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setTitleTextAttributes:#{NSForegroundColorAttributeName:[UIColor whiteColor]}];
}
This works good although it produce lack of cohesion in the code.
I used walapu's answer to make my own solution. The point is, that I set up navigation bar tint color also in presentViewController:animated:completion: and not using appearance proxy, but directly for MFMailComposeViewController.
- (void)presentViewController:(UIViewController *)viewControllerToPresent animated:(BOOL)animated completion:(void (^)(void))completion
{
if ([viewControllerToPresent isKindOfClass:[MFMailComposeViewController class]]) {
[((MFMailComposeViewController *)viewControllerToPresent).navigationBar setTintColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
}
[super presentViewController:viewControllerToPresent animated:animated completion:^{
if ([viewControllerToPresent isKindOfClass:[MFMailComposeViewController class]]) {
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleLightContent];
}
if (completion) {
completion();
}
}];
}
I had a problem in particular with iMessage. Had to set navbar background image, setting the tint didn't work. Used slicing to stretch a 2x2 pixel image with my color.
[UINavigationBar.appearance setBackgroundImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"red"]
forBarMetrics:UIBarMetricsDefault];
Here I change the nav bar's global appearance immediately before presenting the activity view, and change it back once the activity view is dismissed. (Tested on iOS 12, Swift 5)
let activityVC = UIActivityViewController...
// Temporarily change the nav bar button's tint color.
let originalColor = UINavigationBar.appearance().tintColor
activityVC.completionWithItemsHandler = { type, completed, items, error in
UINavigationBar.appearance().tintColor = originalColor
}
UINavigationBar.appearance().tintColor = UIColor.blue
present(activityVC, ...
Related
I have multiple UINavigationController throughout my storyboard. Since I am using a tabbarcontroller every tab item has it's own UINavigationController embedded before it's ViewController.
I'd like to style all of these at the same time. Things that I have tried that work are going to a ViewControllers ViewWillAppear method and adding the following lines:
UINavigationBar *nav = self.navigationController.navigationBar;
nav.barStyle = UIBarStyleBlack;
nav.tintColor = [UIColor blackColor];
nav.translucent = NO;
But then I'd have to do this for every tab item and every ViewController.
Also, doing the following in the AppDelegate did NOT work:
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setTintColor:[UIColor blackColor]];
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setTranslucent:NO];
Specifically I am curious why using the appearance proxy doesn't work. I'm fairly new so if you give a solution involving custom UINavigationController or setting up a delegate please elaborate. Thanks!
Add this line too in your code:
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setBarTintColor:[UIColor blackColor]];
My app is showing iMessages ViewController via UIActivityController. However, the colors of labels are all messed up (blue so they are barely visible). I think this is because the view controller is using my app's tint color. See below.
How can i fix this?
thanks!
I ran into something similar with presenting MFMailComposerViewController modally. Try setting the appearance of your app's tint color to nil when presenting the activity controller, and then back to your desired app tint when it completes. Here's what I did with MFMailComposer. You should be able to modify for your activity controller:
...
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setBarTintColor:nil]; // Set to default before presenting
MFMailComposeViewController *mailVC = [[MFMailComposeViewController alloc] init];
mailVC.mailComposeDelegate = self;
[self.navigationController presentViewController:mailVC animated:YES completion:nil];
...
- (void)mailComposeController:(MFMailComposeViewController*)controller didFinishWithResult:(MFMailComposeResult)result error:(NSError*)error
{
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setBarTintColor:MyAppsCustomColor]; // set it back when finished
[self.navigationController dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:nil];
}
EDIT
When I use this solution, it changes the nav bar appearance in the presented modal that is selected in the activity view controller (messages, mail, etc). I'm setting my app's nav bar appearance to blue in my delegate, and then back to blue in the completion block. The app's nav bar remains blue, and the presented messages/mail modal is shown with the default light gray nav bar.
UIActivityViewController* avc =
[[UIActivityViewController alloc] initWithActivityItems:#[#""]
applicationActivities:nil];
avc.completionHandler = ^(NSString *activityType, BOOL completed) {
// ...
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
// Set tint color back to blue.
// This block is executed whether the user finishes or cancels.
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setBarTintColor:[UIColor blueColor]];
[[self navigationController] setNeedsStatusBarAppearanceUpdate];
});
};
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setBarTintColor:nil];
[self presentViewController:avc animated:YES completion:nil];
I am trying to set the color of my navigation bar through AppDelegate and setting a solid color box as the background image. This is the code i used:
- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions: (NSDictionary *)launchOptions
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleLightContent animated:YES];
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setBackgroundImage:
[UIImage imageNamed:#"Navigation"] forBarMetrics:UIBarMetricsDefault];
NSDictionary *attributes = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:[UIColor whiteColor], NSForegroundColorAttributeName, nil];
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setTitleTextAttributes:attributes];
return YES;
}
Surprisingly i get a white line in the middle of the navigation bar. Keep in mind that i have used the exactly same method in another application and everything worked fine. This is what it looks like:
Check your View Controller is under the NavigationController. I bet you don't set navigationController for your viewController.
BTW, If you want to use white status style, you need to change "View controller-based status bar appearance" to NO as well.
Ok finally realized what was wrong. I forgot to add the #2x photo. It was resizing a small photo since i am running my application on iphone5s.
This question already has answers here:
MFMailComposeViewController in iOS 7 statusbar are black
(13 answers)
Closed 3 years ago.
I'm having an issue with the navigation Bar in MFMailComposeViewController.
I have an app where we set the "Status bar style" to "UIStatusBarStyleLightContent" in the plist file. It works perfectly in all views except when I call up MFMailComposeViewController. It goes back to black. The rest is ok. We have a custom image that does carry forward, and I can set the tint color with no problems. Any one know how to fix this? How to reset the "Status bar style" to "UIStatusBarStyleLightContent" in mail?
in AppDelegate
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setBackgroundImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"headerLogo.png"] forBarMetrics:UIBarMetricsDefault];
calling mail
MFMailComposeViewController *mailController = [[MFMailComposeViewController alloc] init];
mailController.mailComposeDelegate = self;
[[mailController navigationBar] setTintColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
[[mailController navigationBar] setBarTintColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
[self presentViewController:mailController animated:YES completion:nil];
I believe setting the barStyle in MFMailViewController is something that is not accessible unless because of private API in Apple's code. The reason why you're able to set the UINavigationBar to a certain picture in the app delegate is because in the app delegate, you are calling to the appearance of the UINavigationBar class instead of the tint color of the MFMailViewController's navigation bar.
Hope this helps
In the info.plist add new row:
UIViewControllerBasedStatusBarAppearance
Set it to:
NO
MFMailComposeViewController *mail = [[MFMailComposeViewController alloc] init];
[self presentViewController: mail animated: YES completion: ^ {
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleLightContent];
}];
I'm currently customising the navigation bar background image of my iOS app using the UIAppearance proxy. There is a button for switching between two different modes which triggers a notification. This notification will change the background to a different image using again the proxy. My problem is that this change becomes visible only when I go to a different controller and I come back to it. I'm not able to force the update of the navigation bar within the controller.
I've tried this in my MainTabBarController:
- (void) onAppChangedMode: (NSNotification*)notif {
APP_MODE mode = (APP_MODE) [[notif object] integerValue];
// change navigation bar appearance
[[UILabel appearance] setHighlightedTextColor:[UIColor redColor]];
[[UINavigationBar appearance] setBackgroundImage:[UIImage imageNamed:(mode == 0 ? #"navbar.png" : #"navbar2.png")] forBarMetrics:UIBarMetricsDefault];
// trying to update
for (UIViewController* vc in self.viewControllers) {
[vc.navigationController.navigationBar setNeedsDisplay];
}
}
but nothing...it's not working. Any idea how to achieve it?
Thanks!
Just remove views from windows and add they again:
for (UIWindow *window in [UIApplication sharedApplication].windows) {
for (UIView *view in window.subviews) {
[view removeFromSuperview];
[window addSubview:view];
}
}
I just have the same problem, this code will help you:
- (IBAction)btnTouched:(id)sender {
[[UADSwitch appearance]setOnTintColor:[UIColor redColor]];
// Present a temp UIViewController
UIViewController *vc = [[UIViewController alloc]init];
[self presentViewController:vc animated:NO completion:nil];//"self" is an instance of UIViewController
[vc dismissViewControllerAnimated:NO completion:nil];
}
Try this code to change the background image for the current nav bar only:
[self.navigationController.navigationBar setBackgroundImage:image forBarMetrics:UIBarMetricsDefault];
Use the above code after changing the UIAppearance. This will force a change in the nav bar of the current controller. The nav bars for the other controllers will be handled by the change in UIAppearance.