I have a tabbarcontroller when i tap on item which is selected then navigationController do pop to root vc. How can i disable animation ? i want that it will do pop to root vc but without animation
i can just disable pop to root vc, but dont know how to disable animation
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, shouldSelect viewController: UIViewController) -> Bool {
return viewController != selectedViewController
}
Try popToRootViewController programmatically when tap is detected:
extension ARTabBar: UITabBarControllerDelegate {
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, shouldSelect viewController: UIViewController) -> Bool {
if viewController == selectedViewController {
if let viewController = viewController as? UINavigationController {
viewController.popToRootViewController(animated: false)
}
return false
} else {
return true
}
}
}
I have a tabbar with 3 items. When I click on the second Item on the Tab, I want to present another tabbar which would be like a presentation and maybe the rootViewcontroller but I am unable to do that because it appears like a normal controller above the main tabbar.
I have extended UITabBarControllerDelegate
override func tabBar(_ tabBar: UITabBar, didSelect item: UITabBarItem) {
if let controller = self.viewControllers?[self.selectedIndex] as? BaseVC {
controller.modalPresentationStyle = .fullScreen
self.present(controller, animated: true, completion: nil)
}
}
BaseVC is the Tabbar controller I am trying to present.
but this does not change the behavior of the item.
I am new to swift. I am implementing tabbar controller in my Project and facing some design difficulty. My goal is when user click a tabbar item it should not navigate to another view controller. It should stayed in the current view and add a pop up view to the current view controller.I have tried but always it navigate to next view controller.
Create a UITabBarController subclass and use that class for your tab bar controller. Confirm to UITabBarControllerDelegate in the tab bar controller and return false in tabBarController shouldSelect method when you don't want to navigate to a view controller. Here you can show the popup view.
class TabbarController: UITabBarController, UITabBarControllerDelegate {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
delegate = self
}
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, shouldSelect viewController: UIViewController) -> Bool {
if let navigationController = viewController as? UINavigationController,
navigationController.viewControllers.contains(where: { $0 is MoreViewController }) {
//show pop up view
return false
} else {
return true
}
}
}
Or you can add UITabBarControllerDelegate in one of its embedded view controller like this
class ViewController: UIViewController, UITabBarControllerDelegate {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.tabBarController?.delegate = self
}
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, shouldSelect viewController: UIViewController) -> Bool {
if let navigationController = viewController as? UINavigationController,
navigationController.viewControllers.contains(where: { $0 is MoreViewController }) {
//show pop up view
return false
} else {
return true
}
}
}
I have got a tab bar controller and in home view controller i have a navigation controller.
-Tab Bar Controller
-- HomeVC
--- VC1 navigation push -> VC2
In VC1 navigation bar is not hidden but inside VC2 is hidden. And im controlling it with viewwillappear and viewwilldisappear.
override func viewWillAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
navigationController?.navigationBar.barStyle = .blackTranslucent
}
override func viewWillDisappear(_ animated: Bool) {
navigationController?.navigationBar.isHidden = false
}
But turning back to the VC1 without swipe, I mean clicking tab bar homeVC icon hides navigation bar. I want to dismiss or pop current viewcontroller and turn back to VC1.
So you can do this by popToRootViewController of UINavigationController. you have to handle this in tabBar(_ tabBar: UITabBar, didSelect item: UITabBarItem) method of UITabBarDelegate.
override func tabBar(_ tabBar: UITabBar, didSelect item: UITabBarItem) {
if let rootView = self.viewControllers!["Index of VC1 Controller"] as? UINavigationController {
rootView.popToRootViewController(animated: false)
}
}
I've been having some trouble with something I thought might be easy. I have a table in my root view controller, when a row is selected I push a new view and from there I go to another tab.
My question is how do I make sure that as soon as the user taps the first tab the navigation controller will pop to root?
Following delegate is called while each tab is selected on tabbar.
-(void) tabBarController:(UITabBarController *)tabBarController didSelectViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController
Put following code inside this delegate method.
if ([viewController isKindOfClass:[UINavigationController class]])
{
[(UINavigationController *)viewController popToRootViewControllerAnimated:NO];
}
its working fine on my app.
For Swift lovers:
import UIKit
class YourTabBarControllerHere: UITabBarController,
UITabBarControllerDelegate {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.delegate = self;
}
func tabBarController(tabBarController: UITabBarController,
didSelectViewController viewController: UIViewController) {
if let vc = viewController as? UINavigationController {
vc.popViewControllerAnimated(animated: false);
}
}
}
Edit: Swift 3 update, thanks to #Justin Oroz for pointing that out.
In Swift 3.1
Add UITabBarControllerDelegate to your TabBar Class:
class YourClass: UITabBarController, UITabBarControllerDelegate {
After:
override func tabBar(tabBar: UITabBar, didSelectItem item:
UITabBarItem) {
let yourView = self.viewControllers![self.selectedIndex] as! UINavigationController
yourView .popToRootViewControllerAnimated(false)
}
What you are trying to do sounds a little bit odd. Have you read the Human Interface Guidelines on combining UINavigationControllers and UITabBarControllers?
However, what you need to do is detect the selection of the tab by setting a delegate for your UITabBarController and implementing the tabBarController:didSelectViewController: delegate method. In this method you need to pop back to the root view controller using UINavigationController's popToRootViewControllerAnimated: method.
Swift 5.1 Answer:
class YourTabBarName: UITabBarController, UITabBarControllerDelegate
{
override func viewDidLoad()
{
super.viewDidLoad()
self.delegate = self
}
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, didSelect viewController: UIViewController)
{
if let vc = viewController as? UINavigationController
{ vc.popToRootViewController(animated: false) }
}
}
[self.navigationController popToRootViewControllerAnimated:NO];
Swift 4.2
The solution that works for me is to subclass the UITabBarController and add the two delegate functions as follows:
import UIKit
class MyCustomTabBarController: UITabBarController, UITabBarControllerDelegate {
var previousSelectedTabIndex:Int = 0
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.delegate = self
}
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, didSelect viewController: UIViewController) {
self.previousSelectedTabIndex = tabBarController.selectedIndex
}
override func tabBar(_ tabBar: UITabBar, didSelect item:
UITabBarItem) {
let vc = self.viewControllers![previousSelectedTabIndex] as! UINavigationController
vc.popToRootViewController(animated: false)
}
}
Make sure you set animated to false otherwise you will get
Unbalanced calls to begin/end appearance transitions for the targeted ViewController
Try this.
class TabBarClass: UITabBarController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
}
override func tabBar(_ tabBar: UITabBar, didSelect item: UITabBarItem) {
let vc = self.viewControllers![selectedIndex] as! UINavigationController
vc.popToRootViewController(animated: false)
}
}
First, you should create subclass of UITabbarController and add Observer:
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
[self.tabBar addObserver:self forKeyPath:#"selectedItem" options:NSKeyValueObservingOptionOld | NSKeyValueObservingOptionNew context:nil];
}
When tabbar is selected, We will process in method:
-(void)observeValueForKeyPath:(NSString *)keyPath ofObject:(id)object change:(NSDictionary *)change context:(void *)context{
if ([keyPath isEqualToString:#"selectedItem"] && [object isKindOfClass:[UITabBar class]]){
UITabBar *bar = (UITabBar *)object; // The object will be the bar we're observing.
// The change dictionary will contain the previous tabBarItem for the "old" key.
UITabBarItem *wasItem = [change objectForKey:NSKeyValueChangeOldKey];
NSUInteger was = [bar.items indexOfObject:wasItem];
// The same is true for the new tabBarItem but it will be under the "new" key.
UITabBarItem *isItem = [change objectForKey:NSKeyValueChangeNewKey];
NSUInteger is = [bar.items indexOfObject:isItem];
if (is == was) {
UIViewController *vc = self.viewControllers[is];
if ([vc isKindOfClass:[UINavigationController class]]) {
[(UINavigationController *)vc popToRootViewControllerAnimated:YES];
}
}
}
}
The UTabController suggests a different UX for letting a user "pop to root". When switching back to a tab, it keeps the full UINav stack from before. If they tap the bar item a second time (tapping the selected tab), only then does it pop to root. That's all automatic. Some apps, like instagram, allow a third tap to scroll to top.
I'd suggest sticking with the defaults as that's what users will be expecting.
The below had worked for me .This code in swift 3:
1> subclass UITabbarController and implement two below method with one iVAr:
class MyTabBarController: UITabBarController ,UITabBarControllerDelegate {
var previousSelectedTabIndex : Int = -1
}
2> set the tabbar delegate in viewdidLoad
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.delegate = self // you must do it}
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, didSelect viewController: UIViewController) {
self.previousSelectedTabIndex = tabBarController.selectedIndex
}
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController,
shouldSelect viewController: UIViewController) -> Bool {
if self.previousSelectedTabIndex == tabBarController.selectedIndex {
let nav = viewController as! UINavigationController // mine in nav_VC
for vc in nav.childViewControllers {
if vc is YUOR_DESIRED_VIEW_CONTROLLER {
nav.popToViewController(vc, animated: true)
return false// IT WONT LET YOU GO TO delegate METHOD
}
}
}
return true
}
tabBarController.selectedIndex give you the selected tab
In tabBarController_shouldSelect_viewController method you can set your desired view controller with some easy calculation.
if you are not getting the above code play with both above method and you come to know how both working together
Use selected view controller to popToRootViewController. Basically you need to cast this instance.
Swift
((selectedViewController) as! UINavigationController).popToRootViewController(animated: false)
//
// I just added extra line so the scroll bar won't annoy you.
Xcode 11.5, Swift 5:
You don't need to use two delegate methods. Only one is enough:
extension CustomTabBarController: UITabBarControllerDelegate {
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, shouldSelect viewController: UIViewController) -> Bool {
if tabBarController.viewControllers?.firstIndex(of: viewController) == tabBarController.selectedIndex,
let navigationController = viewController as? UINavigationController {
navigationController.popToRootViewController(animated: true)
}
return true
}
}
//create a tabbar controller class set it to your TabbarController in storyboard
import UIKit
class MyTabbarViewController: UITabBarController,UITabBarControllerDelegate{
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.delegate = self
}
func tabBarController(_ tabBarController: UITabBarController, didSelect viewController: UIViewController)
{
if let vc = viewController as? UINavigationController
{ vc.popToRootViewController(animated: false) }
}
}