I was wondering if there was a sort of simple way to (when the device is in the correct Portrait orientation), to programmatically display the RootViewController in the UIPopoverController of the UISplitViewController.
You have the UIBarButtonItem that the split view gave you in it's delegate callback. You can use that one:
[barItem.target performSelector:barItem.action withObject:barItem];
Its a hack, but works. Please file a request at http://bugreport.apple.com for a better solution.
Related
After upgrading my project to iOS7
when I do a BACK Button and the UINavigationController goes back to the previous page, an ImageView on the top of the screen shifts down.
I use IB to do my layouts. These are my Simulated Metrics:
I have AutoLayout off. Any ideas on what the issue might be? I wasnt sure if anyone wants to see specific code and I didnt want to clutter up the question with too much code.
Updates: Based on the comment questions, I wanted to make these updates:
In no place in the application .h or .m file do I make any changes to the imageview's sizes or location.
In both the viewDidLoad and viewDidAppear I call a user-defined method called recalculateAll but their is no reference at all to any imageview sizes. Just for trying it out I commented out the entire section and ran the code and it still jumps down.
In my init I do programatically set some imageviews (you see the #132 in what appears to be a bubble) using their x and y's.
Here is a typical navigation I use for moving from the view controller to the tableviewcontroller:
GetTimeOffByType *showTimeOffReport = [[GetTimeOffByType alloc] initWithNibName:#"GetTimeOffByType" bundle:nil];
showTimeOffReport.timeOffType = #"Vacation";
[self.navigationController pushViewController:showTimeOffReport animated:YES];
These are all .xib files, no storyboarding at all. Its basically a view controller which has an embedded UINavigationController with 6 buttons. Each time a button is pressed it pushes a UITableViewController passing different parameters and showing different data. The transition I am using to get back to the original UIViewController is simply the iOS generated BACK button (so no code to show for that)
Update#2 Hopefully this will help someone solve this wierd behavior. So if I were to click on the table view cell on showTimeOffReport to get the cell detail and then using BACK navigate all the way back it doesnt jump down.
Update#3 Ok this is something I just discovered : The issue of jumping down or not is related to the translucency of the UINavigationBar. If you have a Translucent = YES it will start from the top of the window. If you have a translucent = NO it will start from the bottom of the UINavigationBar.
You might try setting the new property on UIViewController edgesForExtendedLayout to UIRectEdgeNone.
Here is a good resource that explains more about how view layouts changed in iOS 7.
See Apple Documentation
If you plan to be backwards compatible you will probably need to do some runtime checks and adjust positioning if the device is not running iOS 7.
This might help you..You can try adding UIViewControllerBasedStatusBarAppearance key and set it's value NO in your info.plist
UIViewControllerBasedStatusBarAppearance = NO
I have a universal app that uses a UIActionSheet. The selection is mandatory, which works fine on the iphone, but on iPad it is presented as a popover, so tapping outside of it dismisses it, which I don't want to allow.
I know that there is a delegate method for UIPopoverController I could use, but I don't think I can get access to the UIActionSheet's popover controller to set the delegate etc...
Anyone know how I can do this?
Thanks in advance.
It's possible using undocumented APIs, see
See Accessing UIPopoverController for UIActionSheet on iPad about changing passthroughViews for UIPopoverView which is an undocumented ancestor of UIActionSheet.
Another solution would be to override [UIApplication sendEvent:] and filter the touches coming outside the action sheet.
I recommend you to use a different widget for modal selection. Users don't expect UIActionSheet to be modal, so it would be only confusing to them.
I am trying to set up a UISplitViewController in a Storyboard with the detail going to a UITabBarController which then goes to a UINavigationController wrapping my first ViewController.
The problem I am having is getting the UIBarButtonItem to show up in the Navigation Item when the device is in the portrait orientation. Should the UITabBarController be the delegate for the UISplitViewController and send delegate message to every child view controller to have them create the bar button item and popover?
I found need for this same solution. I am using it in one of my prototype applications for home-control.
The problem you cite is only the first of a couple of problems you'll run into. I believe i have full the solution now working for both iPad/iPhone (Universal app).
You can read my post here: problem and solution description with sample code at my blog
In summary, you'll run into the following issues (most for iPad imple., some for iPhone imple. when building Universal app.):
The template code in appDelegate sets up delegate incorrectly for the new shape (it really no-longer understands what type of controller is present for the detail view
UISplitViewController delegate calls are not propagated thru the UITabbarController to the tabs correctly
You will need to decide how/when to notify the tab(s) of the current detail selection
When building as Universal App some of the notification now need to happen in prepareForSegue: methods (as some of the other notifications don't happen on the iPhone platform.)
(All of this is shown at my blog post)
You can find example and theory in this site. Very good example.
Short version:
I'm alloc/init/retaining a new UIViewController in one UIViewControllers viewDidLoad method, adding the new View to self.view. This usually works, but it seems to mess up orientation change handling of my iPad app.
Longer version:
I'm building a fairly complex iPad application, involving a lot of views and viewcontrollers. After running into some difficulties adjusting to the device orientation, I made a simple XCode project to figure out what the problem is.
Firstly, I have read the Apple Docs on this subject (a small document called "Why won't my UIViewController rotate with the device?"), and while I do believe it has something to do with one of the reasons listed there, I'm not really sure how to fix it.
In my test project I have an appDelegate, a rootViewController, and a UISplitViewController with two custom viewControllers. I use a button on the rootViewController to switch to the splitViewController, and from there I can use a button to switch back to the rootViewController. So far everything is great, i.e. all views adjust to the device orientation.
However, in the right viewController of the splitViewController, I use the viewDidLoad method to initialize some other viewControllers, and add their views to its own view:
self.newViewController = [[UIViewController new] autorelease];
[newViewController.view setBackgroundColor:[UIColor yellowColor]];
[self.view addSubview:newViewController.view];
This is where things go wrong. Somehow, after adding this view, adjusting to device orientation is messy. On startup everything is fine, after I switch to the splitViewController everything is still fine, but as soon as I switch back to the rootViewController it's all over. I have tried (almost) everything regarding retaining and releasing the viewcontroller, but nothing seems to fix it.
As you can see from the code above, I have declared the newViewController as a property, but the same happens if I don't.
Shouldn't I be adding a ViewController's view to my own view at all? That would really mess up my project, as I have a lot of viewControllers doing all sorts of things.
Any help on this would be greatly appreciated...
I had the same problem, seams resolved by removing from the parent view the "autoresize subview" option in IB.
Select the view a then: Inspector -> Attributes (first tab) -> drawing.
What I think is happening is that your new viewcontroller is getting the autorotation calls and probably not handling them. Meanwhile your old viewcontrollers and its views won't get the autorotation calls and will be stuck in whatever orientation they were in.
I can't tell, but I think what you want to do is to make a UIView and add it to your old viewcontroller, instead of making a UIVIewController and adding its view.
I'm working on an iPad app that uses a UISplitView. Inspired by http://blog.blackwhale.at/2010/04/your-first-ipad-split-view-application/, I display a button in my detail view when in portrait mode that shows the popover controller. This works great. However, the appropriate UISplitViewControllerDelegate message is only sent when the device rotates. So, when the app first loads (in portrait mode), my navigation button is not visible.
Is it possible to somehow convince the UISplitViewController to send that message on load or something, or do I need to re-implement my own popover logic to get things working?
Thanks,
-Patrick
We had the exact same issue and it turned out that this thread had the right clues. When comparing our app with the SplitView template, we noticed that the split template does exactly what was mentioned here: set the UISplitViewController as the root view controller in application:didFInishLaunchingWithOptions.
Out previous solution linked the split view controller in the XIB directly to the window. While this works it seems the split view has difficulties getting the startup orientation and the missing button occurs. When we removed the link in the XIB and created it in code in the app delegate, everything ran fine.
That's weird. Maybe you missed something. Take a look at the template based on a splitController. It works fine form very startup no matter in what mode the app was loaded.
did you make sure that your UISplitViewController's view is the only subview of your UIWindow, and that you added it inside the application:didFinishLaunchingWithOptions: method of your app delegate