The pic below is my storyboard and I wish to present the Upcoming VC at AppDelegate. Below is my code at AppDelegate I manage to present the Upcoming VC when called.
UIStoryboard *sb = [UIStoryboard storyboardWithName:#"Main" bundle:nil];
UIViewController *vc=[sb instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:#"Upcoming"];
UINavigationController *nv = [[UINavigationController alloc] initWithRootViewController:vc];
nv.modalTransitionStyle = UIModalTransitionStyleFlipHorizontal;
[self.window.rootViewController presentViewController:nv animated:YES completion:nil];
At the Upcoming VC, I manage to present the navigationBar with title and background colour but my back button < remain missing. My back button is auto generated.
-(void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated{
self.navigationController.navigationBar.hidden = NO;
[self.navigationItem setHidesBackButton:FALSE];
//====Make the navigation Bar appear===
[self.navigationController.navigationBar setBackgroundImage:nil forBarMetrics:UIBarMetricsDefault];
self.navigationController.navigationBar.shadowImage = nil;
//=== Set the navigation Back < color
self.navigationController.navigationBar.tintColor = [UIColor whiteColor];
[self.navigationController.navigationBar setBarTintColor : [ UIColor grayColor]];
//=== Set the navigation Bar text color
[self.navigationController.navigationBar
setTitleTextAttributes:#{NSForegroundColorAttributeName : [UIColor whiteColor]}];
self.navigationController.navigationBar.translucent = NO;
}
Please help.
What do you expect then ?
back button will be only visible when you push your UpcomingVC from existing ViewController
remember that just taking navigation bar in storyboard will now show backbutton automatically.
You can create full view controller hierarchy
Like
UpcomingVC is pushed from HomeVC then you can set HomeVC as root view controller embedded in UINavigationController and to the next line you can push
UpcomingVC with animation false
you can tyr this
StoryBoard to StoryBoard
ViewControllerName * next = [self.storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:#"ViewControllerName"];
[self.navigationController pushViewController:next animated:YES];
you must be nib registered.
I'm doing something that supposed to work in iOS7 and 8, but for some reason it doesn't. I want to customize navigation bar properties via appearance proxy and want it to be applied to all navigation bars even the ones that are inside UIPopover.
So, first step I do the following:
UINavigationBar *appearance = [UINavigationBar appearance];
appearance.barTintColor = [UIColor redColor];
appearance.titleTextAttributes = #{
NSForegroundColorAttributeName: [UIColor yellowColor]
};
This supposed to make all navigation bars red with yellow title. Works in iOS8. Mostly work in iOS7. For some reason when view controller is being presented inside UIPopoverController - it gets default appearance.
This is how I present popover (nothing fancy - almost standard sample code):
UIViewController *vc = [self.storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:#"vc2"];
vc.title = #"View Controller 2";
UINavigationController *nav = [[UINavigationController alloc] initWithRootViewController:vc];
self.popover = [[UIPopoverController alloc] initWithContentViewController:nav];
[self.popover presentPopoverFromRect:CGRectMake(100, 100, 100, 100) inView:self.view permittedArrowDirections:0 animated:YES];
Ok, so I decided to try appearanceWhenContainedIn and explicitly set its appearance there. Added the following code to initial appearance customization:
appearance = [UINavigationBar appearanceWhenContainedIn:[UIPopoverController class], nil];
appearance.barTintColor = [UIColor greenColor];
appearance.titleTextAttributes = #{
NSForegroundColorAttributeName: [UIColor blueColor]
};
Now. For some reason this last code doesn't affect anything. In iOS8 navigation bars inside UIPopoverControllers are still red + yellow, not green + blue, and iOS7 still uses default appearance.
What am I doing wrong here?
Here is link to the test project: https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/6402890/TestAppearance.zip
For iOS 8
NS_CLASS_AVAILABLE_IOS(8_0) #interface UIPopoverPresentationController : UIPresentationController
Using the following worked for me. Navigation controller is contained in the UIPopoverPresentationController.
appearance = [UINavigationBar appearanceWhenContainedIn:[UIPopoverPresentationController class], nil];
For iOS 7
appearance = [UINavigationBar appearanceWhenContainedIn:[UIPopoverController class], nil];
UINavigationController *nav = [[UINavigationController alloc] initWithRootViewController:vc];
nav.navigationBar.barStyle = UIBarStyleBlack;
If navigation controller is loaded from storyboard, barStyle is also needed to be set to UIBarStyleBlack in storyboard.
That simple example but that don't work;
I have ViewController where inside on NavigationConroller, then I want to add new ViewConroller with its self navigation controller.
In main viewController:
CustomViewController *vc = [[CustomViewController alloc] init];
NewNavigationVC *nav = [[NewNavigationVC alloc] initWithRootViewController:vc];
[self presentViewController:nav animated:NO completion:nil];
Two controllers has a background color clear, but still black color.
Navigation bar I can do clear, but not a view.
UPDATE:
if i change self.window.backroundColor to red for example, that work but not clear
UPDATE 2:
[self addChildViewController:vc];
[self.view addSubview:vc.view];
[vc didMoveToParentViewController:self];
and when I want to dealloc vc
[vc willMoveToParentViewController:nil];
[vc.view removeFromSuperview];
[vc removeFromParentViewController];
All work ok without navigation controller
A viewController's view's backgroundColor can't be clear (as in showing the previous viewController's view on the stack). Pushing or presenting a viewController will put the new viewController on the stack and hide the previous viewController completely.
If you want a clear backgroundColor on the view, you will need to either:
1) set the viewController as a childViewController of the previous viewController - then animate the transition yourself.
Or
2) transplant the viewController logic into the previous viewController and have a new uiview act as that view (you also need to animated the transition yourself).
The solution is as follows. For clear example we use tableViewController:
UITableViewController *modalVC = [UITableViewController new];
UINavigationController *modalNVC = [[UINavigationController alloc] initWithRootViewController:modalVC];
UIViewController *mainVC = [UIViewController new];
UINavigationController *mainNVC = [[UINavigationController alloc] initWithRootViewController:mainVC];
modalVC.view.backgroundColor = UIColor.clearColor;
mainVC.view.backgroundColor = UIColor.redColor;
mainNVC.modalPresentationStyle = UIModalPresentationCurrentContext;
[mainNVC presentViewController:modalNVC animated:YES completion:NULL];
The key feature is that you have to set modalPresentationStyle of presentingViewController to UIModalPresentationCurrentContext.
It works fine BUT without slide animation. You will get result immediately.
But you can still use "blood hack" to retain visual animation by successive presenting, dismissing and presenting again:
modalVC.view.backgroundColor = UIColor.clearColor;
mainVC.view.backgroundColor = UIColor.redColor;
[mainNVC presentViewController:modalNVC animated:YES completion:^{
[modalNVC dismissViewControllerAnimated:NO completion:^{
mainNVC.modalPresentationStyle = UIModalPresentationCurrentContext;
[mainNVC presentViewController:modalNVC animated:NO completion:NULL];
}];
}];
You basically need to tell the navigation controller to:
navigation.modalPresentationStyle = .overCurrentContext
In other words:
A presentation style where the content is displayed over another view controller’s content.
and that's it.
You can also make sure that:
navigation.view.backgroundColor = .clear
In my iOS app, my window's rootViewController is a tab bar controller with the a hierarchy like this:
UITabBarController
UINavigationController 1
FirstContentController
UINavigationController 2
...
UINavigationController 3
...
...
When the user taps a certain row on FirstContentController, an instance of SecondController will be pushed onto its navigation controller. SecondContentController sets hidesBottomBarWhenPushed to YES in its init method and sets self.navigationController.toolbarHidden to NO in viewWillAppear:.
In iOS 6, the user would tap the row in FirstController and SecondController would get pushed onto the nav controller. Because it has hidesBottomBarWhenPushed set, it would hide the tab bar and, by the time the transition animation was complete, SecondController would be on the screen with its toolbar visible.
However, when testing this under iOS 7, hidesBottomBarWhenPushed's behavior seems to have changed. What I see now is:
the tab bar hides, as expected
the toolbar appears, as expected
a gap of unusable space exactly 49 pixels tall (the height of the tab bar) appears between the toolbar and the content view
The gap is completely unusable - it doesn't respond to touches and if i set clipsToBounds to YES on the main view, nothing draws there. After a lot of debugging and examining subview hierarchies, it looks like iOS's autosizing mechanism resizes the view controller's view to a height of 411 (on the iPhone 5). It should be 460 to reach all the way down to the toolbar, but the layout system seems to be including a "ghost" 49-pixel-tall tab bar.
This problem only occurs if the view controller has a tab bar controller as one if its parent containers.
On iOS 7, how can I have the tab bar disappear and a toolbar seamlessly slide into place when a new controller is pushed, and still have the view take up the entire space between the navigation item and the toolbar?
UPDATE
After further investigation, this only happens if SecondController's edgesForExtendedLayout is set to UIRectEdgeNone. However, unless I set that property to UIRectEdgeNone, the view's frame is too long and extends under the toolbar, where it can't be seen or interacted with.
I found that adding the following 2 lines of code in viewDidLoad of SecondViewController (where you want to hide TabBar but show the tool bar) fixes the problem.
self.extendedLayoutIncludesOpaqueBars = YES;
self.edgesForExtendedLayout = UIRectEdgeBottom;
My viewDidLoad of SecondViewController is as follows:
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
// These 2 lines made the difference
self.extendedLayoutIncludesOpaqueBars = YES;
self.edgesForExtendedLayout = UIRectEdgeBottom;
// The usual configuration
self.navigationController.navigationBar.barStyle = UIBarStyleBlack;
self.navigationController.navigationBar.translucent = NO;
self.navigationController.toolbarHidden = NO;
self.navigationController.toolbar.barStyle = UIBarStyleBlack;
self.navigationController.toolbar.translucent = NO;
.
.
}
But you need to fix the frame of the view manually as this causes the size to be (320x504). Which means it extends even behind the tool bar. If this is not a concern for you then this solution should work.
You will not like this answer This is not the answer you want, but after some research on hiding the tab bar in iOS7, my conclusion is: don't!
Tab bars have never been meant to be hidden - after all why have a UITabBarController if you want to hide the tab bar. The hidesBottomBarWhenPushed on view controllers is for hiding the bottom bar of a navigation controller, not tab bars. From the documentation:
A view controller added as a child of a navigation controller can display an optional toolbar at the bottom of the screen. The value of this property on the topmost view controller determines whether the toolbar is visible. If the value of this property is YES, the toolbar is hidden. If the value of this property is NO, the bar is visible.
Moreover, you are warned not to modify the tab bar object directly. Again, from the documentation:
You should never attempt to manipulate the UITabBar object itself stored in this property.
This is exactly what you are doing when setting it to hidden.
In iOS6 this has worked, but now in iOS7, it doesn't. And it seems very error prone to hide it. When you finally manage to hide it, if the app goes to the background and returns, Apple's layout logic overrides your changes.
My suggestion is to display your data modally. In iOS7 you can create custom transitions, so if it is important to you to have a push transition, you can recreate it yourself, although this is a bit over the top. Normal modal transition is something users are familiar, and actually fits this case better than push which hides the tab bar.
Another solution is to use a toolbar instead of a tab bar. If you use the navigation controller's toolbar for your tabs, you can then use hidesBottomBarWhenPushed as you require and it would give you the behavior you expect.
Uncheck "Hide bottoms bars on push" and set your autoconstraints as if there is a tab bar. Then in "ViewDidLoad" of the controller you want to hide the system tab bar, put the following code.
[self.tabBarController.tabBar setFrame:CGRectZero];
This makes sure the tab bar still accepts user interaction yet not visible to users. (other alternatives such as setting it 0 alpha or hidden will render tab bar useless) Now the autoconstaraints will make sure your view displays correctly with the tab bar height as zero.
It's a bug in iOS 7 UIKit due to this particular combination of:
UITabBarController
hidesBottomBarWhenPushed = YES
edgesForExtendedLayout = UIRectEdgeNone
UINavigationController toolbar
You should file a bug with Apple and include your sample code.
To work around the bug you need to remove one of those four conditions. Two likely options:
Fix the layout of your "second" view controller so that it works correctly when edgesForExtendedLayout is set to UIRectEdgeAll. This could be as simple as setting the contentInset on a scroll view.
Don't use UINavigationController's built-in toolbar. Instead, create a separate UIToolBar instance and manually add it to your second view controller's view.
You do have to set the tabBar of the TabBarController to hidden and your view should have autosizing set to flexible height.
With this code it's working:
#implementation SecondController
-(id)init
{
if( (self = [super init]) )
{
}
return self;
}
- (void)viewDidLoad;
{
[super viewDidLoad];
self.view.backgroundColor = [UIColor redColor];
self.view.autoresizingMask = UIViewAutoresizingFlexibleHeight;
self.tabBarController.tabBar.hidden = YES;
}
-(void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[super viewDidAppear:animated];
// will log a height of 411, instead of the desired 460
NSLog(#"frame: %#", NSStringFromCGRect(self.view.frame));
}
#end
Or, if you do want to use the hidesBottomBarWhenPushed method, you have to do this before you push the view controller obviously:
-(void)tableView:(UITableView*)tableView didSelectRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath*)indexPath
{
SecondController* controller = [[SecondController alloc] init];
controller.hidesBottomBarWhenPushed = YES;
[self.navigationController pushViewController:controller animated:YES];
}
If using the second method, your viewDidLoad method can get rid of flexible height method as well as tabBarHidden:
- (void)viewDidLoad;
{
[super viewDidLoad];
self.view.backgroundColor = [UIColor redColor];
self.edgesForExtendedLayout = UIRectEdgeNone;
}
See the result:
The key to this conundrum is that the navigationcontroller.view.frame size doesn't change. Going of batkin's Gist here is a gist of my own.
FirstViewController.m
#import "FirstController.h"
#import "SecondController.h"
#implementation FirstController
-(id)init
{
if( (self = [super init]) )
{
self.tabBarItem.title = #"Foo";
self.tabBarItem.image = [UIImage imageNamed:#"Tab Icon.png"];
}
return self;
}
-(NSInteger)tableView:(UITableView*)tableView numberOfRowsInSection:(NSInteger)section
{
return 1;
}
-(UITableViewCell*)tableView:(UITableView*)tableView cellForRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath*)indexPath
{
UITableViewCell* cell = [[UITableViewCell alloc] initWithStyle:UITableViewCellStyleDefault reuseIdentifier:nil];
cell.textLabel.text = #"Click";
return cell;
}
-(void)tableView:(UITableView*)tableView didSelectRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath*)indexPath
{
SecondController* controller = [[SecondController alloc] init];
self.tabBarController.tabBar.hidden = YES;
[self.navigationController pushViewController:controller animated:YES];
}
#end
SecondViewController.m
#import "SecondController.h"
#implementation SecondController
-(void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[super viewWillAppear:animated];
self.view.backgroundColor = [UIColor redColor];
self.view.clipsToBounds = YES;
/* ENTER VORTEX OF DESPAIR */
// without this, there's no gap, but the view continues under the tool
// bar; with it, I get the 49-pixel gap thats making my life miserable
self.edgesForExtendedLayout = UIRectEdgeNone;
//this resizes the navigation controller to fill the void left by the tab bar.
CGRect newFrame = self.navigationController.view.frame;
newFrame.size.height = newFrame.size.height + 49;
self.navigationController.view.frame = newFrame;
/* EXIT VORTEX OF DESPAIR */
self.navigationController.toolbarItems = #[
[[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithBarButtonSystemItem:UIBarButtonSystemItemSave target:nil action:nil]
];
}
-(void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[super viewDidAppear:animated];
self.navigationController.toolbarHidden = NO;
// will log a height of 411, instead of the desired 460
NSLog(#"frame: %#", NSStringFromCGRect(self.view.frame));
NSLog(#"frame: %#", NSStringFromCGRect(self.navigationController.view.frame));
}
-(void)viewWillDisappear:(BOOL)animated {
[super viewWillDisappear:animated];
self.tabBarController.tabBar.hidden = NO;
self.navigationController.toolbarHidden = YES;
//this resizes the navigation controller back to normal.
CGRect newFrame = self.navigationController.view.frame;
newFrame.size.height = newFrame.size.height - 49;
self.navigationController.view.frame = newFrame;
//this is optional and resizes the view to fill the void left by the missing toolbar.
CGRect newViewFrame = self.view.frame;
newViewFrame.size.height = newViewFrame.size.height + 49;
self.view.frame = newViewFrame;
}
#end
If you are using Auto Layout,make sure you pin the view to its superview instead of Top Layout Guide or Bottom Layout Guide.
Have you tried to move your call hidesBottomBarWhenPushed in the viewDidLoad or before the secondViewController is pushed?
With ios7, a lot of timing issues appear if you don't do the calls at teh good moment.
You mention that you can fix this by not touching the edgesForExtendedLayout. Is there a necessary reason that the content/controls of the view controller are contained in the root view of the pushed view controller? You might consider wrapping everything in a view that is the first and only child of the main view. Then adjust that view's frame in the viewDidLayoutSubviews of the pushed view controller to avoid having content permanently beneath the toolbar using the top/bottomLayoutGuide of the view controller.
I built a new project using your Gist, and I encased the UITabBarController in a UINavigationController:
- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions
{
self.window = [[UIWindow alloc] initWithFrame:[[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds]];
// Override point for customization after application launch.
self.window.backgroundColor = [UIColor whiteColor];
[self.window makeKeyAndVisible];
UITabBarController* tabController = [[UITabBarController alloc] init];
tabController.viewControllers = #[
[[UINavigationController alloc] initWithRootViewController:[[FirstViewController alloc] init]],
[[UINavigationController alloc] initWithRootViewController:[[FirstViewController alloc] init]]
];
UINavigationController *navController = [[UINavigationController alloc] initWithRootViewController:tabController];
[navController setNavigationBarHidden:YES];
self.window.rootViewController = navController;
return YES;
}
And to show the SecondViewController, here is what I did:
- (void)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView didSelectRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath
{
SecondViewController* controller = [[SecondViewController alloc] init];
// Reaching the UITabBarViewController's parent navigationController
[self.parentViewController.navigationController pushViewController:controller animated:YES];
}
Finally, in the secondViewController:
- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[super viewWillAppear:animated];
self.view.backgroundColor = [UIColor redColor];
self.view.clipsToBounds = YES;
// The following line only works in iOS7
if (floor(NSFoundationVersionNumber) > NSFoundationVersionNumber_iOS_6_1) {
self.edgesForExtendedLayout = UIRectEdgeNone;
}
[self.navigationItem setRightBarButtonItem:[[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithBarButtonSystemItem:UIBarButtonSystemItemSave target:nil action:nil]];
UIBarButtonItem * logoutButton = [[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithBarButtonSystemItem:UIBarButtonSystemItemReply target:nil action:nil];
NSMutableArray * arr = [NSMutableArray arrayWithObjects:logoutButton, nil];
[self setToolbarItems:arr animated:YES];
[self.navigationController setNavigationBarHidden:NO animated:YES];
[self.navigationController setToolbarHidden:NO animated:YES];
}
- (void)viewWillDisappear:(BOOL)animated
{
[self.navigationController setNavigationBarHidden:YES animated:YES];
[self.navigationController setToolbarHidden:YES animated:YES];
}
Here's what it does look:
EDIT: Changed the example and changed the screenshot. Made the example iOS6 compatible.
I manually manage hide/unhide of bottom-tab-bar along with fade animation by
...
[self.tabBarController.tabBar setHidden:NO];
[self.tabBarController.tabBar setAlpha:0.1];
[UIView animateWithDuration:0.2 animations:^{
[self.tabBarController.tabBar setAlpha:1.0];
}];
...
Bottom Toolbar on SecondVC was added in IB. No problem so far. Using Storyboard.
I think you can set SecondController's edgesForExtendedLayout to UIRectEdgeBottom.
This helps me:
Choose you view controller in storyboard -> Go to properties -> Uncheck "Adjust Scroll View Insets"
As #Leo Natan is pointing out, it seems as if hiding the tab bar and showing a toolbar is discouraged.
Nevertheless, there is a very easy solution that is working:
Just check "Under Opaque Bars" in the view controller properties in the storyboard as shown below:
I used to set the window's view with [self.window setRootViewController:myViewController] where myViewController was just an ordinary view controller. The status bar looked normal. Then I added a navigation controller. I used:
UINavigationController *navigationController = [[UINavigationController alloc] init];
[navigationController pushViewController:myViewController animated:NO];
NSLog(#"height of status bar is %d", [UIApplication sharedApplication].statusBarFrame.size.height);
[self.window setRootViewController:navigationController];
The log prints "height of status bar is 20".
Yet the status bar look super tall:
This is the navigationbar with status bar. As both are of same color so it seems you that status bar height is larger.
Change Color of Navigationbar and then check :
[your_navController.navigationBar setTintColor:[UIColor blueColor]];