This is the barcode scanning tutorial I used in my program, so that you have a lot more context when you read my code: Link
Here is what my program does so far: Essentially, when I scan an item's barcode with my phone, the UIAlert pops up with the barcode ID displayed and a button prompting the user to open the "Results" page. This is all fine and good, but how do I pass that same scanned barcode ID into a label on the Result's page? I have been stuck on this for 2 days now, even though it seems like such an easy task.
Any help is much appreciated <3
Here is my relevant code:
ProductCatalog.plist ->
Link to Image
Scanner_ViewController.swift (first View Controller) ->
import UIKit
import AVFoundation
class Scanner_ViewController: UIViewController, AVCaptureMetadataOutputObjectsDelegate, ScannerDelegate
{
private var scanner: Scanner?
override func viewDidLoad()
{
super.viewDidLoad()
self.scanner = Scanner(withDelegate: self)
guard let scanner = self.scanner else
{
return
}
scanner.requestCaptureSessionStartRunning()
}
override func didReceiveMemoryWarning()
{
super.didReceiveMemoryWarning()
// Dispose of any resources that can be recreated.
}
// Mark - AVFoundation delegate methods
public func metadataOutput(_ output: AVCaptureMetadataOutput,
didOutput metadataObjects: [AVMetadataObject],
from connection: AVCaptureConnection)
{
guard let scanner = self.scanner else
{
return
}
scanner.metadataOutput(output,
didOutput: metadataObjects,
from: connection)
}
// Mark - Scanner delegate methods
func cameraView() -> UIView
{
return self.view
}
func delegateViewController() -> UIViewController
{
return self
}
func scanCompleted(withCode code: String)
{
print(code)
showAlert_Success(withTitle: (code))
}
private func showAlert_Success(withTitle title: String)
{
let alertController = UIAlertController(title: title, message: "Product has been successfully scanned", preferredStyle: .alert)
// programatically segue to the next view controller when the UIAlert pops up
alertController.addAction(UIAlertAction(title:"Get Results", style: .default, handler:{ action in self.performSegue(withIdentifier: "toAnalysisPage", sender: self) }))
present(alertController, animated: true)
}
}
Scanner.Swift (accompanies Scanner_ViewController.swift)->
import Foundation
import UIKit
import AVFoundation
protocol ScannerDelegate: class
{
func cameraView() -> UIView
func delegateViewController() -> UIViewController
func scanCompleted(withCode code: String)
}
class Scanner: NSObject
{
public weak var delegate: ScannerDelegate?
private var captureSession : AVCaptureSession?
init(withDelegate delegate: ScannerDelegate)
{
self.delegate = delegate
super.init()
self.scannerSetup()
}
private func scannerSetup()
{
guard let captureSession = self.createCaptureSession()
else
{
return
}
self.captureSession = captureSession
guard let delegate = self.delegate
else
{
return
}
let cameraView = delegate.cameraView()
let previewLayer = self.createPreviewLayer(withCaptureSession: captureSession,
view: cameraView)
cameraView.layer.addSublayer(previewLayer)
}
private func createCaptureSession() -> AVCaptureSession?
{
do
{
let captureSession = AVCaptureSession()
guard let captureDevice = AVCaptureDevice.default(for: .video) else
{
return nil
}
let deviceInput = try AVCaptureDeviceInput(device: captureDevice)
let metaDataOutput = AVCaptureMetadataOutput()
// add device input
if captureSession.canAddInput(deviceInput) && captureSession.canAddOutput(metaDataOutput)
{
captureSession.addInput(deviceInput)
captureSession.addOutput(metaDataOutput)
guard let delegate = self.delegate,
let viewController = delegate.delegateViewController() as? AVCaptureMetadataOutputObjectsDelegate else
{
return nil
}
metaDataOutput.setMetadataObjectsDelegate(viewController,
queue: DispatchQueue.main)
metaDataOutput.metadataObjectTypes = self.metaObjectTypes()
return captureSession
}
}
catch
{
// handle error
}
return nil
}
private func createPreviewLayer(withCaptureSession captureSession: AVCaptureSession,
view: UIView) -> AVCaptureVideoPreviewLayer
{
let previewLayer = AVCaptureVideoPreviewLayer(session: captureSession)
previewLayer.frame = view.layer.bounds
previewLayer.videoGravity = .resizeAspectFill
return previewLayer
}
private func metaObjectTypes() -> [AVMetadataObject.ObjectType]
{
return [.qr,
.code128,
.code39,
.code39Mod43,
.code93,
.ean13,
.ean8,
.interleaved2of5,
.itf14,
.pdf417,
.upce
]
}
public func metadataOutput(_ output: AVCaptureMetadataOutput,
didOutput metadataObjects: [AVMetadataObject],
from connection: AVCaptureConnection)
{
self.requestCaptureSessionStopRunning()
guard let metadataObject = metadataObjects.first,
let readableObject = metadataObject as? AVMetadataMachineReadableCodeObject,
let scannedValue = readableObject.stringValue,
let delegate = self.delegate
else
{
return
}
delegate.scanCompleted(withCode: scannedValue)
}
public func requestCaptureSessionStartRunning()
{
self.toggleCaptureSessionRunningState()
}
public func requestCaptureSessionStopRunning()
{
self.toggleCaptureSessionRunningState()
}
private func toggleCaptureSessionRunningState()
{
guard let captureSession = self.captureSession
else
{
return
}
if !captureSession.isRunning
{
captureSession.startRunning()
}
else
{
captureSession.stopRunning()
}
}
}
Analysis_ViewController.swift (second view controller) ->
Right now, the forKey: has been hard-coded to item ID 8710908501708 because I have no idea how to actually pass camera-scanned ID's into the second View Controller :/
import UIKit
class Analysis_ViewController: UIViewController
{
#IBOutlet weak var productTitle: UILabel!
func getData()
{
let path = Bundle.main.path(forResource:"ProductCatalog", ofType: "plist")
let dict:NSDictionary = NSDictionary(contentsOfFile: path!)!
if (dict.object(forKey: "8710908501708" as Any) != nil)
{
if let levelDict:[String : Any] = dict.object(forKey: "8710908501708" as Any) as? [String : Any]
{
// use a for loop to iterate through all the keys and values in side the "Levels" dictionary
for (key, value) in levelDict
{
// if we find a key named whatever we care about, we can print out the value
if (key == "name")
{
productTitle.text = (value as! String)
}
}
}
}
}
// listing the better options that are safer in comparison to the scanned product image
override func viewDidLoad()
{
super.viewDidLoad()
getData()
}
}
Do you have a variable to hold the scanned ID in your view controllers? If not, you can add var itemID: String? to both Scanner_ViewController and Analysis_ViewController.
Then in your func where you get the scanned code, you can set it to the variable.
func scanCompleted(withCode code: String) {
print(code)
itemID = code // Saves the scanned code to your var
showAlert_Success(withTitle: (code))
}
For passing data to another view controller via segue, you might want to look into this UIViewController method for segues: documentation here. This answer also might help.
override func prepare(for segue: UIStoryboardSegue, sender: Any?) {
if segue.identifier == "toAnalysisPage" {
if let viewController = segue.destination as? Analysis_ViewController {
viewController.itemID = itemID
}
}
}
Here is my Objective-C code which I'm using to load a nib for my customised UIView:
-(id)init{
NSArray *subviewArray = [[NSBundle mainBundle] loadNibNamed:#"myXib" owner:self options:nil];
return [subviewArray objectAtIndex:0];
}
What is the equivalent code in Swift?
My contribution:
extension UIView {
class func fromNib<T: UIView>() -> T {
return Bundle(for: T.self).loadNibNamed(String(describing: T.self), owner: nil, options: nil)![0] as! T
}
}
Then call it like this:
let myCustomView: CustomView = UIView.fromNib()
..or even:
let myCustomView: CustomView = .fromNib()
Original Solution
I created a XIB and a class named SomeView (used the same name for
convenience and readability). I based both on a UIView.
In the XIB, I changed the "File's Owner" class to SomeView (in the identity inspector).
I created a UIView outlet in SomeView.swift, linking it to the top level view in the XIB file (named it "view" for convenience). I then added other outlets to other controls in the XIB file as needed.
in SomeView.swift, I loaded the XIB inside the "init with code" initializer. There is no need to assign anything to "self". As soon as the XIB is loaded, all outlets are connected, including the top level view. The only thing missing, is to add the top view to the view hierarchy:
.
class SomeView: UIView {
required init(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
NSBundle.mainBundle().loadNibNamed("SomeView", owner: self, options: nil)
self.addSubview(self.view); // adding the top level view to the view hierarchy
}
...
}
Note that this way I get a class that loads itself from nib. I could then use SomeView as a class whenever UIView could be used in the project (in interface builder or programmatically).
Update - using Swift 3 syntax
Loading a xib in the following extension is written as an instance method, which can then be used by an initializer like the one above:
extension UIView {
#discardableResult // 1
func fromNib<T : UIView>() -> T? { // 2
guard let contentView = Bundle(for: type(of: self)).loadNibNamed(String(describing: type(of: self)), owner: self, options: nil)?.first as? T else { // 3
// xib not loaded, or its top view is of the wrong type
return nil
}
self.addSubview(contentView) // 4
contentView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = false // 5
contentView.layoutAttachAll(to: self) // 6
return contentView // 7
}
}
Using a discardable return value since the returned view is mostly of no interest to caller when all outlets are already connected.
This is a generic method that returns an optional object of type UIView. If it fails to load the view, it returns nil.
Attempting to load a XIB file with the same name as the current class instance. If that fails, nil is returned.
Adding the top level view to the view hierarchy.
This line assumes we're using constraints to layout the view.
This method adds top, bottom, leading & trailing constraints - attaching the view to "self" on all sides (See: https://stackoverflow.com/a/46279424/2274829 for details)
Returning the top level view
And the caller method might look like this:
final class SomeView: UIView { // 1.
required init?(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) { // 2 - storyboard initializer
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
fromNib() // 5.
}
init() { // 3 - programmatic initializer
super.init(frame: CGRect.zero) // 4.
fromNib() // 6.
}
// other methods ...
}
SomeClass is a UIView subclass that loads its content from a SomeClass.xib file. The "final" keyword is optional.
An initializer for when the view is used in a storyboard (remember to use SomeClass as the custom class of your storyboard view).
An initializer for when the view is created programmatically (i.e.: "let myView = SomeView()").
Using an all-zeros frame since this view is laid out using auto-layout.
Note that an "init(frame: CGRect) {..}" method is not created independently, since auto-layout is used exclusively in our project.
& 6. Loading the xib file using the extension.
Credit: Using a generic extension in this solution was inspired by Robert's answer below.
Edit
Changing "view" to "contentView" to avoid confusion. Also changed the array subscript to ".first".
Now being able to return -> Self in swift helps simplify this a bit. Last confirmed on Swift 5.
extension UIView {
class func fromNib(named: String? = nil) -> Self {
let name = named ?? "\(Self.self)"
guard
let nib = Bundle.main.loadNibNamed(name, owner: nil, options: nil)
else { fatalError("missing expected nib named: \(name)") }
guard
/// we're using `first` here because compact map chokes compiler on
/// optimized release, so you can't use two views in one nib if you wanted to
/// and are now looking at this
let view = nib.first as? Self
else { fatalError("view of type \(Self.self) not found in \(nib)") }
return view
}
}
If your .xib file and subclass share the same name, you can use:
let view = CustomView.fromNib()
If you have a custom name, use:
let view = CustomView.fromNib(named: "special-case")
NOTE:
If you're getting the error "view of type YourType not found in.." then you haven't set the view's class in the .xib file
Select your view in the .xib file, and press cmd + opt + 4 and in the class input, enter your class
Swift 4 - 5.1 Protocol Extensions
public protocol NibInstantiatable {
static func nibName() -> String
}
extension NibInstantiatable {
static func nibName() -> String {
return String(describing: self)
}
}
extension NibInstantiatable where Self: UIView {
static func fromNib() -> Self {
let bundle = Bundle(for: self)
let nib = bundle.loadNibNamed(nibName(), owner: self, options: nil)
return nib!.first as! Self
}
}
Adoption
class MyView: UIView, NibInstantiatable {
}
This implementation assumes that the Nib has the same name as the UIView class. Ex. MyView.xib. You can modify this behavior by implementing nibName() in MyView to return a different name than the default protocol extension implementation.
In the xib the files owner is MyView and the root view class is MyView.
Usage
let view = MyView.fromNib()
try following code.
var uiview :UIView?
self.uiview = NSBundle.mainBundle().loadNibNamed("myXib", owner: self, options: nil)[0] as? UIView
Edit:
import UIKit
class TestObject: NSObject {
var uiview:UIView?
init() {
super.init()
self.uiview = NSBundle.mainBundle().loadNibNamed("myXib", owner: self, options: nil)[0] as? UIView
}
}
If you have a lot of custom views in your project you can create class like UIViewFromNib
Swift 2.3
class UIViewFromNib: UIView {
var contentView: UIView!
var nibName: String {
return String(self.dynamicType)
}
//MARK:
override init(frame: CGRect) {
super.init(frame: frame)
loadViewFromNib()
}
required init?(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
loadViewFromNib()
}
//MARK:
private func loadViewFromNib() {
contentView = NSBundle.mainBundle().loadNibNamed(nibName, owner: self, options: nil)[0] as! UIView
contentView.autoresizingMask = [.FlexibleWidth, .FlexibleHeight]
contentView.frame = bounds
addSubview(contentView)
}
}
Swift 5
class UIViewFromNib: UIView {
var contentView: UIView!
var nibName: String {
return String(describing: type(of: self))
}
//MARK:
override init(frame: CGRect) {
super.init(frame: frame)
loadViewFromNib()
}
required init?(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
loadViewFromNib()
}
//MARK:
func loadViewFromNib() {
let bundle = Bundle(for: UIViewFromNib.self)
contentView = UINib(nibName: nibName, bundle: bundle).instantiate(withOwner: self).first as? UIView
contentView.autoresizingMask = [.flexibleWidth, .flexibleHeight]
contentView.frame = bounds
addSubview(contentView)
}
}
And in every class just inherit from UIViewFromNib, also you can override nibName property if .xib file has different name:
class MyCustomClass: UIViewFromNib {
}
I achieved this with Swift by the following code:
class Dialog: UIView {
#IBOutlet var view:UIView!
override init(frame: CGRect) {
super.init(frame: frame)
self.frame = UIScreen.mainScreen().bounds
NSBundle.mainBundle().loadNibNamed("Dialog", owner: self, options: nil)
self.view.frame = UIScreen.mainScreen().bounds
self.addSubview(self.view)
}
required init(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
}
}
Don't forget to connect your XIB view outlet to view outlet defined in swift. You can also set First Responder to your custom class name to start connecting any additional outlets.
Hope this helps!
Tested in Xcode 7 beta 4 , Swift 2.0 and iOS9 SDK .
The following code will assign xib to the uiview.
You can able to use this custom xib view in storyboard and access the IBOutlet object also.
import UIKit
#IBDesignable class SimpleCustomView:UIView
{
var view:UIView!;
#IBOutlet weak var lblTitle: UILabel!
#IBInspectable var lblTitleText : String?
{
get{
return lblTitle.text;
}
set(lblTitleText)
{
lblTitle.text = lblTitleText!;
}
}
override init(frame: CGRect) {
super.init(frame: frame)
loadViewFromNib ()
}
required init?(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
loadViewFromNib ()
}
func loadViewFromNib() {
let bundle = NSBundle(forClass: self.dynamicType)
let nib = UINib(nibName: "SimpleCustomView", bundle: bundle)
let view = nib.instantiateWithOwner(self, options: nil)[0] as! UIView
view.frame = bounds
view.autoresizingMask = [.FlexibleWidth, .FlexibleHeight]
self.addSubview(view);
}
}
Access customview programatically
self.customView = SimpleCustomView(frame: CGRectMake(100, 100, 200, 200))
self.view.addSubview(self.customView!);
Source code - https://github.com/karthikprabhuA/CustomXIBSwift
Building on the above solutions.
This will work across all project bundles and no need for generics when calling fromNib().
Swift 2
extension UIView {
public class func fromNib() -> Self {
return fromNib(nil)
}
public class func fromNib(nibName: String?) -> Self {
func fromNibHelper<T where T : UIView>(nibName: String?) -> T {
let bundle = NSBundle(forClass: T.self)
let name = nibName ?? String(T.self)
return bundle.loadNibNamed(name, owner: nil, options: nil)?.first as? T ?? T()
}
return fromNibHelper(nibName)
}
}
Swift 3
extension UIView {
public class func fromNib() -> Self {
return fromNib(nibName: nil)
}
public class func fromNib(nibName: String?) -> Self {
func fromNibHelper<T>(nibName: String?) -> T where T : UIView {
let bundle = Bundle(for: T.self)
let name = nibName ?? String(describing: T.self)
return bundle.loadNibNamed(name, owner: nil, options: nil)?.first as? T ?? T()
}
return fromNibHelper(nibName: nibName)
}
}
Can be used like this:
let someView = SomeView.fromNib()
Or like this:
let someView = SomeView.fromNib("SomeOtherNibFileName")
Swift 4
Don't forget to write ".first as? CustomView".
if let customView = Bundle.main.loadNibNamed("myXib", owner: self, options: nil)?.first as? CustomView {
self.view.addSubview(customView)
}
If you want to use anywhere
The Best Solution is Robert Gummesson's answer.
extension UIView {
class func fromNib<T: UIView>() -> T {
return Bundle.main.loadNibNamed(String(describing: T.self), owner: nil, options: nil)![0] as! T
}
}
Then call it like this:
let myCustomView: CustomView = UIView.fromNib()
I prefer this solution (based on the answer if #GK100):
I created a XIB and a class named SomeView (used the same name for convenience and readability). I based both on a UIView.
In the XIB, I changed the "File's Owner" class to SomeView (in the identity inspector).
I created a UIView outlet in SomeView.swift, linking it to the top level view in the XIB file (named it "view" for convenience). I then added other outlets to other controls in the XIB file as needed.
In SomeView.swift, I loaded the XIB inside the init or init:frame: CGRect initializer. There is no need to assign anything to "self". As soon as the XIB is loaded, all outlets are connected, including the top level view. The only thing missing, is to add the top view to the view hierarchy:
class SomeView: UIView {
override init(frame: CGRect) {
super.init(frame: frame)
NSBundle.mainBundle().loadNibNamed("SomeObject", owner: self, options: nil)
self.addSubview(self.view); // adding the top level view to the view hierarchy
}
required init(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
NSBundle.mainBundle().loadNibNamed("SomeObject", owner: self, options: nil)
self.addSubview(self.view); // adding the top level view to the view hierarchy
}
...
}
A nice way to do this with Swift is to use an enum.
enum Views: String {
case view1 = "View1" // Change View1 to be the name of your nib
case view2 = "View2" // Change View2 to be the name of another nib
func getView() -> UIView? {
return NSBundle.mainBundle().loadNibNamed(self.rawValue, owner: nil, options: nil).first as? UIView
}
}
Then in your code you can simply use:
let view = Views.view1.getView()
Updated for Swift 5
Somewhere define below:
extension UIView {
public class func fromNib<T: UIView>() -> T {
let name = String(describing: Self.self);
guard let nib = Bundle(for: Self.self).loadNibNamed(
name, owner: nil, options: nil)
else {
fatalError("Missing nib-file named: \(name)")
}
return nib.first as! T
}
}
And use above like:
let view: MyCustomView = .fromNib();
Which will search in same bundle as MyCustomView, then load MyCustomView.nib file (if file exists, and is added to project).
let subviewArray = NSBundle.mainBundle().loadNibNamed("myXib", owner: self, options: nil)
return subviewArray[0]
Swift 5 - Clean and easy to use extension
[Copy Paste from production project]
//
// Refactored by Essam Mohamed Fahmi.
//
import UIKit
extension UIView
{
static var nib: UINib
{
return UINib(nibName: "\(self)", bundle: nil)
}
static func instantiateFromNib() -> Self?
{
return nib.instantiate() as? Self
}
}
extension UINib
{
func instantiate() -> Any?
{
return instantiate(withOwner: nil, options: nil).first
}
}
Usage
let myCustomView: CustomView = .instantiateFromNib()
I just do this way :
if let myView = UINib.init(nibName: "MyView", bundle: nil).instantiate(withOwner: self)[0] as? MyView {
// Do something with myView
}
This sample uses the first view in the nib "MyView.xib" in the main bundle. But you can vary either the index, the nib name, or the bundle ( main by default ).
I used to awake views into the view init method or make generic methods as in the proposed answers above ( which are smart by the way ), but I don't do it anymore because I have noticed use cases are often different, and to cover all cases, generic methods become as complex as using the UINib.instantiate method.
I prefer to use a factory object, usually the ViewController that will use the view, or a dedicated factory object or view extension if the view needs to be used in multiple places.
In this example, a ViewController loads a view from nib.
The nib file can be changed to use different layouts for the same view class. ( This not nice code, it just illustrates the idea )
class MyViewController {
// Use "MyView-Compact" for compact version
var myViewNibFileName = "MyView-Standard"
lazy var myView: MyView = {
// Be sure the Nib is correct, or it will crash
// We don't want to continue with a wrong view anyway, so ! is ok
UINib.init(nibName: myViewNibFileName, bundle: nil).instantiate(withOwner: self)[0] as! MyView
}()
}
Swift 3 version of Logan's answer
extension UIView {
public class func fromNib(nibName: String? = nil) -> Self {
return fromNib(nibName: nibName, type: self)
}
public class func fromNib<T: UIView>(nibName: String? = nil, type: T.Type) -> T {
return fromNib(nibName: nibName, type: T.self)!
}
public class func fromNib<T: UIView>(nibName: String? = nil, type: T.Type) -> T? {
var view: T?
let name: String
if let nibName = nibName {
name = nibName
} else {
name = self.nibName
}
if let nibViews = Bundle.main.loadNibNamed(name, owner: nil, options: nil) {
for nibView in nibViews {
if let tog = nibView as? T {
view = tog
}
}
}
return view
}
public class var nibName: String {
return "\(self)".components(separatedBy: ".").first ?? ""
}
public class var nib: UINib? {
if let _ = Bundle.main.path(forResource: nibName, ofType: "nib") {
return UINib(nibName: nibName, bundle: nil)
} else {
return nil
}
}
}
Here is a clean and declarative way of programmatically loading a view using a protocol and protocol extension (Swift 4.2):
protocol XibLoadable {
associatedtype CustomViewType
static func loadFromXib() -> CustomViewType
}
extension XibLoadable where Self: UIView {
static func loadFromXib() -> Self {
let nib = UINib(nibName: "\(self)", bundle: Bundle(for: self))
guard let customView = nib.instantiate(withOwner: self, options: nil).first as? Self else {
// your app should crash if the xib doesn't exist
preconditionFailure("Couldn't load xib for view: \(self)")
}
return customView
}
}
And you can use this like so:
// don't forget you need a xib file too
final class MyView: UIView, XibLoadable { ... }
// and when you want to use it
let viewInstance = MyView.loadFromXib()
Some additional considerations:
Make sure your custom view's xib file has the view's Custom Class set (and outlets/actions set from there), not the File Owner's.
You can use this protocol/extension external to your custom view or internal. You may want to use it internally if you have some other setup work when initializing your view.
Your custom view class and xib file need to have the same name.
All you have to do is call init method in your UIView class.
Do it that way:
class className: UIView {
#IBOutlet var view: UIView!
override init(frame: CGRect) {
super.init(frame: frame)
setup()
}
required init?(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)!
}
func setup() {
UINib(nibName: "nib", bundle: nil).instantiateWithOwner(self, options: nil)
addSubview(view)
view.frame = self.bounds
}
}
Now, if you want to add this view as a sub view in view controller, do it that way in view controller.swift file:
self.view.addSubview(className())
Similar to some of the answers above but a more consistent Swift3 UIView extension:
extension UIView {
class func fromNib<A: UIView> (nibName name: String, bundle: Bundle? = nil) -> A? {
let bundle = bundle ?? Bundle.main
let nibViews = bundle.loadNibNamed(name, owner: self, options: nil)
return nibViews?.first as? A
}
class func fromNib<T: UIView>() -> T? {
return fromNib(nibName: String(describing: T.self), bundle: nil)
}
}
Which gives the convenience of being able to load the class from a self named nib but also from other nibs/bundles.
You can do this via storyboard, just add proper constraints for view. You can do this easily by subclassing any view from your own let's say BaseView:
Objective-C
BaseView.h
/*!
#class BaseView
#discussion Base View for getting view from xibFile
#availability ios7 and later
*/
#interface BaseView : UIView
#end
BaseView.m
#import "BaseView.h"
#implementation BaseView
#pragma mark - Public
- (instancetype)initWithCoder:(NSCoder *)coder
{
self = [super initWithCoder:coder];
if (self) {
[self prepareView];
}
return self;
}
#pragma mark - LifeCycle
- (instancetype)initWithFrame:(CGRect)frame
{
self = [super initWithFrame:frame];
if (self) {
[self prepareView];
}
return self;
}
#pragma mark - Private
- (void)prepareView
{
NSArray *nibsArray = [[NSBundle mainBundle] loadNibNamed:NSStringFromClass([self class]) owner:self options:nil];
UIView *view = [nibsArray firstObject];
view.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = NO;
[self addSubview:view];
[self addConstraintsForView:view];
}
#pragma mark - Add constraints
- (void)addConstraintsForView:(UIView *)view
{
[self addConstraints:#[[NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem:view
attribute:NSLayoutAttributeBottom
relatedBy:NSLayoutRelationEqual
toItem:self attribute:NSLayoutAttributeBottom
multiplier:1.0
constant:0],
[NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem:view
attribute:NSLayoutAttributeTop
relatedBy:NSLayoutRelationEqual
toItem:self attribute:NSLayoutAttributeTop
multiplier:1.0
constant:0],
[NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem:view
attribute:NSLayoutAttributeLeft
relatedBy:NSLayoutRelationEqual
toItem:self attribute:NSLayoutAttributeLeft
multiplier:1.0
constant:0],
[NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem:view
attribute:NSLayoutAttributeRight
relatedBy:NSLayoutRelationEqual
toItem:self attribute:NSLayoutAttributeRight
multiplier:1.0
constant:0]
]];
}
#end
Swift 4
import UIKit
class BaseView : UIView {
// MARK: - LifeCycle
required init?(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
prepareView()
}
override init(frame: CGRect) {
super.init(frame: frame)
prepareView()
}
internal class func xibName() -> String {
return String(describing: self)
}
// MARK: - Private
fileprivate func prepareView() {
let nameForXib = BaseView.xibName()
let nibs = Bundle.main.loadNibNamed(nameForXib, owner: self, options: nil)
if let view = nibs?.first as? UIView {
view.backgroundColor = UIColor.clear
view.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = false
addSubviewWithConstraints(view, offset: false)
}
}
}
UIView+Subview
public extension UIView {
// MARK: - UIView+Extensions
public func addSubviewWithConstraints(_ subview:UIView, offset:Bool = true) {
subview.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = false
let views = [
"subview" : subview
]
addSubview(subview)
var constraints = NSLayoutConstraint.constraints(withVisualFormat: offset ? "H:|-[subview]-|" : "H:|[subview]|", options: [.alignAllLeading, .alignAllTrailing], metrics: nil, views: views)
constraints.append(contentsOf: NSLayoutConstraint.constraints(withVisualFormat: offset ? "V:|-[subview]-|" : "V:|[subview]|", options: [.alignAllTop, .alignAllBottom], metrics: nil, views: views))
NSLayoutConstraint.activate(constraints)
}
}
I provide 2 variants how to add constraints - common one and within visual format language - select any you want :)
Also, by default assumed that xib name has same name as implementation class name. If no - just change xibName parameter.
If you subclass your view from BaseView - you can easily put any view and specify class in IB.
If you want the Swift UIView subclass to be entirely self contained, and have the ability to be instantiated using init or init(frame:) without exposing the implementation detail of using a Nib, then you can use a protocol extension to achieve this. This solution avoids the nested UIView hierarchy as suggested by many of the other solutions.
public class CustomView: UIView {
#IBOutlet weak var nameLabel: UILabel!
#IBOutlet weak var valueLabel: UILabel!
public convenience init() {
self.init(frame: CGRect.zero)
}
public override convenience init(frame: CGRect) {
self.init(internal: nil)
self.frame = frame
}
public required init?(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
commonInit()
}
fileprivate func commonInit() {
}
}
fileprivate protocol _CustomView {
}
extension CustomView: _CustomView {
}
fileprivate extension _CustomView {
// Protocol extension initializer - has the ability to assign to self, unlike
// class initializers. Note that the name of this initializer can be anything
// you like, here we've called it init(internal:)
init(internal: Int?) {
self = Bundle.main.loadNibNamed("CustomView", owner:nil, options:nil)![0] as! Self;
}
}
class func loadFromNib<T: UIView>() -> T {
let nibName = String(describing: self)
return Bundle.main.loadNibNamed(nibName, owner: nil, options: nil)![0] as! T
}
let nibs = Bundle.main.loadNibNamed("YourView", owner: nil, options: nil)
let shareView = nibs![0] as! ShareView
self.view.addSubview(shareView)
// Use this class as super view
import UIKit
class ViewWithXib: UIView {
func initUI() {}
private func xibSetup() {
let view = loadViewFromNib()
view.frame = bounds
view.autoresizingMask = [UIViewAutoresizing.flexibleWidth, UIViewAutoresizing.flexibleHeight]
addSubview(view)
initUI()
}
private func loadViewFromNib() -> UIView {
let thisName = String(describing: type(of: self))
let view = Bundle(for: self.classForCoder).loadNibNamed(thisName, owner: self, options: nil)?.first as! UIView
return view
}
override init(frame: CGRect) {
super.init(frame: frame)
xibSetup()
}
required init?(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
xibSetup()
}
}
// Usages:
class HeaderView: ViewWithXib {
}
let header = HeaderView() // No need to load the view from nib, It will work
More powerful version based on Logan's answer
extension UIView {
public class func fromNib(nibName: String? = nil) -> Self {
return fromNib(nibName: nibName, type: self)
}
public class func fromNib<T: UIView>(nibName: String? = nil, type: T.Type) -> T {
return fromNib(nibName: nibName, type: T.self)!
}
public class func fromNib<T: UIView>(nibName: String? = nil, type: T.Type) -> T? {
var view: T?
let name: String
if let nibName = nibName {
name = nibName
} else {
name = self.nibName
}
if let nibViews = nibBundle.loadNibNamed(name, owner: nil, options: nil) {
if nibViews.indices.contains(nibIndex), let tog = nibViews[nibIndex] as? T {
view = tog
}
}
return view
}
public class var nibName: String {
return "\(self)".components(separatedBy: ".").first ?? ""
}
public class var nibIndex: Int {
return 0
}
public class var nibBundle: Bundle {
return Bundle.main
}
}
And you can use like
class BaseView: UIView {
override class var nibName: String { return "BaseView" }
weak var delegate: StandardStateViewDelegate?
}
class ChildView: BaseView {
override class var nibIndex: Int { return 1 }
}
The most convenient implementation. Here you need two methods, in order to return directly to the object of your class, not UIView.
viewId marked as a class, allowing override
Your .xib can contain more than one view of the top level, this situation is also
handled correctly.
extension UIView {
class var viewId: String {
return String(describing: self)
}
static func instance(from bundle: Bundle? = nil, nibName: String? = nil,
owner: Any? = nil, options: [AnyHashable : Any]? = nil) -> Self? {
return instancePrivate(from: bundle ?? Bundle.main,
nibName: nibName ?? viewId,
owner: owner,
options: options)
}
private static func instancePrivate<T: UIView>(from bundle: Bundle, nibName: String,
owner: Any?, options: [AnyHashable : Any]?) -> T? {
guard
let views = bundle.loadNibNamed(nibName, owner: owner, options: options),
let view = views.first(where: { $0 is T }) as? T else { return nil }
return view
}
}
Example:
guard let customView = CustomView.instance() else { return }
//Here customView has CustomView class type, not UIView.
print(customView is CustomView) // true
let bundle = Bundle(for: type(of: self))
let views = bundle.loadNibNamed("template", owner: self, options: nil)
self.view.addSubview(views?[0] as! UIView)
I prefer the below extension
extension UIView {
class var instanceFromNib: Self {
return Bundle(for: Self.self)
.loadNibNamed(String(describing: Self.self), owner: nil, options: nil)?.first as! Self
}
}
The difference between this and the top answered extension is you don't need to store it an constant or variable.
class TitleView: UIView { }
extension UIView {
class var instanceFromNib: Self {
return Bundle(for: Self.self)
.loadNibNamed(String(describing: Self.self), owner: nil, options: nil)?.first as! Self
}
}
self.navigationItem.titleView = TitleView.instanceFromNib
Robert Gummesson's Answer is perfect. But when we try to use it in SPM or framework it is not working.
I've modified like below to make it work.
internal class func fromNib<T: UIView>() -> T {
return Bundle.module.loadNibNamed(String(describing: T.self), owner: self, options: nil)![0] as! T
}