In Xcode I can't connect the IBOutlet and IBAction through the storyboard. It doesn't show the subclasses I created of new classes. And suggest completion while typing is not also working. I tried reinstalling Xcode but it didn't work. Kindly post your suggestions.
1).Setup your class in storyboard.
2). Follow this screen short.
Try to add them manually(using #IBOutlet) and connect them by drap and drop method. It works everytime with me.
After upgrading to Xcode 6, I opened an old project (that contains a subproject, so it has many targets)
and I noticed that no link from my Storyboard ViewContoller to the relative Objects works.
For example I have a ViewController with a TableView inside and now I cant do can't do anyhing with it because the connection is missing, I can't even redefine a new IBOutlet in the VC because the arrow in the storyboard from the VC won't connect to anything.
To be more clear:
The class is defined in the Custom Class section, so I can't find the problem
What should I do?
Btw I'm using obj-c not swift, I found some related answer but all about swift.
You can also see that the link between the parent view and the custom class is broken (not visible anymore) which is a huge problem.
I had the exact same issue with the app i'm working on actually, updating XCode from 5.xxx to 6.1. The workaround that worked for me was to remove the reference of every view controller and re-add them to the project...
To everyone facing that issue, here's the (annoying) trick :
Step 1 : select both .h and .m view controller files
Step 2 : remove the reference of those files
Step 3 : re-add the files to your project tree
Step 4 : open the storyboard, eventually re-build the project and smile
I can understand those things could be reaaally annoying, but it worked for me... Hope it will help someone else !
In your storyboard hierarchy select the View Controller,
In the right pane Custom Class section Class, select the drop down and your desired view controller.
I've experienced similar behaviour in Xcode 6.1.1 when trying to add the first outlet to a new view.
Tried removing the references and adding the files again as suggested above with no success.
What I did find worked was writing the first property on the new view by hand. I just popped in:
#property NSString *temp;
I could then attach my outlets in the normal way. Just delete the temporary property once you've added your first outlet.
Hope this helps.
It seems typing the outlet first (swift):
#IBOutlet weak var someViewOutlet: UIView!
and then dragging from IB the outlet to the far right type in the above code works.
Restarting Xcode resolves the issue (sometimes). Using Xcode 6.1
Maybe I can help
In my case the problem was that the viewController.swift file was not connected to the StoryBoard. The solution is to click in the Upper border of the view on the storyboard beside the 3 icons (View Controller, First Responder and Exit)...now look over in the Utility Area choose Identity Inspector, and in "Custom Class" choose the custom view controller.
Hope this helps. Xcode is hard!!
Here's the proper solution i believe.
If you renamed the controller in code, you need to update the .xib file.
I could not find a way to do it in the interface builder, so do this:
Open the .xib file with a text editor: right click the file > open as > source code
In the <objects> node find the <placeholder> node with the property placeholderIdentifier="IBFilesOwner" and replace the value in customClass="MyOldControllerName" with your new controller name: customClass="MyNewControllerName"
And all your IBOutlets will work as normal again.
Thanks to everyone who commented.
It is a bug of Xcode 6 / 6.0.1. Downloaded and installed the 6.1 version and the problem disappeared.
Maybe try to delete the outlet from the menu in the storyboard (in your screenshot) and drag it again of the element.
Okay, let's check iff it is the lack of a module name.
In your storyboard ViewController, type in the name of module. (the project name)
2.Clcick outside in another field. When you go back to the module field it may say none, but now there will be a dropdown menu entry for your project name.
Select your project name and see if everything is good.
If there are still issues I will post photos.
Seems to be a workspace issue. Try to remove project form a workspace and add it again. It helped in my case.
I had this, affected all projects on my machine, swift and objective c and drove me mad for ages. Finally also noticed that I could not use the refractor to rename classes either.
The fix for me was:
Close xcode
Delete ~/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData (just doing this on its own did not work!!)
Delete all user data for all my projects using the following from the directory that contains all my projects e.g. /src (be careful with this command!):
find . -name 'xcuserdata' -exec rm -rf {} \;
If you want to do it by hand just do the following for all your projects
Delete .xcodeproj/project.xcworkspace/xcuserdata
Delete .xcodeproj/xcuserdata/.xcuserdatad
Get Spotlight to re-index the drive all my projects were on (not sure if this was required
Re-boot machine
Everything sprang back into life !
I was having this same issue.
It turns out I renamed my view controller class and file name. In storyboard, I had the stale value in the right pane, Custom Class -> Class. So the IBOutlets were not aligning because there were none in the missing class, which is where it was expecting to find the defined outlets.
Filling in the correct class name of the View Controller in the Custom Class field in the right pane fixed my issue.
XCode needs to be more verbose if you have a bad class name in the Custom Class fields.
no one solution fixed my same problem...
But i have solved by:
close xcode
renaming the folder of the project
open xcode
and then the outlets will be back again
I hope that this solution is the right one for the people who have the same problem
In Xcode 6.3 I needed to close Xcode and restart the Mac. Restarting Xcode alone didn't do it for me.
I've had 6.3 for a long time and my problem was with new projects I was creating to test some things. Definitely not an upgrade issue this time.
I have Xcode 6.3 and saw similar issue. Finally few edits in .h file resolved my issue. If your interface has IBOutlet defined as
#interface NavigationViewController :UIViewController
{
IBOutlet UILabel *lblName;
}
change this to and in .m file add #synthesize lblName;
#interface NavigationViewController :UIViewController
{
__weak UILabel *lblName;
}
#property (nonatomic, weak) IBOutlet UILabel *lblName;
I was having this same problem, with no view outlet available to link to. The only way I was able to fix it was to change the owner class of the XIB file to "UIViewController," make the link, and then change it back to my intended custom view controller class. The link stayed and all was well.
I'm sort of new to xCode so i really don't know much about it. I'm having a problem with my .h and .m files. when I control click on of the view or the pan gesture recognizers, it wont connect. It's been two days and I still don't know. I do have multiple view controllers, but I wanted to make a slide-out menu drawer like the one on the Facebook app.
Did you forget the class name?
check if the target actionof the .m file of objective-c class is checked in the attribute or identity inspector. if it is not checked the make it checked. hope it works...
If you are just looking for a library that does the slide in behavior as Facebook and others take a look at: https://github.com/SocialObjects-Software/AMSlideMenu
or follow Ray Wenderlich's tutorial: http://www.raywenderlich.com/32054/how-to-create-a-slide-out-navigation-like-facebook-and-path
I have found out for swipe feature and I can use it in my app. https://github.com/YoonBongKim/SwipeMenuDemo
But the problem is that when i use, I need to change my root view controller like this in Appdelegate.m .
YBSwipeViewController *swipeRootViewCntrlr = [[YBSwipeViewController alloc] initWithMainViewController:mainNavigationCntrlr menuViewController:menuNavigationCntrlr];
self.window.rootViewController = swipeRootViewCntrlr;
As a result, my original viewcontroller is not working. My original viewcontroller is linked with other controller. I can still swipe. But when viewcontroller need to call from other class, the application crush. I would like to know how to do.
I'd suggest going for something that does the exact same thing but with 317 stars on GitHub
https://github.com/meiwin/MWFSlideNavigationViewController
I'm not saying the class you provided doesn't work but it's a lot easier if there's a big community behind the project.
Has anyone tried to implement iCarousel with storyboards? I have an existing project, but not sure if this will work with Storyboards or not. Has anyone done this successfully or provide any directions on what do I need to implement this in a Storyboard project?
I've got to admit, I can't work out why Storyboards are causing an issue for so many people using iCarousel, but I've now included a Storyboard example in the project that demonstrates how to set it up correctly.
https://github.com/nicklockwood/iCarousel/tree/master/Examples/Storyboard%20Demo
FWIW, the view controller code for this example is identical to the Basic iOS demo.
Yes, it works with storyboards.
It works exactly the same way as before iOS 5 Storyboards.
You can create a view in your storyboard and set its class property to be "iCarousel".
Then connect iCarousel delegate and dataSource properties to point to your view controller. (don't forget that your view controller must implement iCarouselDataSource and iCarouselDelegate protocols). You can create an outlet for your iCarousel view too.
Thats all for you to access and to control your iCarousel using Storyboards.
Hope it helps,
hbobenicio.
Check that iCarousel.m is in the compile sources list for your app target. Project > App Target > Build Phases > Compile Sources in xCode 4.6.1.
So, another problem is, that if a view-class was changed to iCarousel and command-b is set, after compiling the alert "Unknown class iCarousel in Interface Builder file." comes.
No, no, iCarousel and Storyboard isn't a good idea.
And the solution:
Make a new Class in your Xcode-Project, name it "iCarousel". Via drag & drop put the Code from the original classfiles in there.
After that, it will work'S well.
I found a solution.
Don't copy the class iCarousel in the project-folder by adding them.
Just reference to them. Then it works.
I was having some issues but I just hadn't set the iCarousel.m file's Target Membership to the right thing when I dragged it in.
That is wrong.
I've try to implement iCarousell in a Storyboard-Project and always get delegate and datasource errors. I think it only works with separated xib.
Always: this class is not key value coding-compliant for the key dataSource.'