WatchKit Extension[4608:145616] Unable to find image named "hello" on Watch - apple-watch

Problem:
Trying to set the WKInterfaceLabel text using xCode 6.2 but it returns this error:
WatchKit Extension[4608:145616] Unable to find image named "hello" on Watch
Code:
#IBOutlet var lblPassword: WKInterfaceLabel!
lblPassword.setText("hello")

Cleaning the project doesn't seem to fix the issue for me. But if you click on the image file, you'll see "Target Membership" options on the right pane. Select all of them, Clean the build and try again.

I got the same error although I am pretty sure these image files exist.
I just terminated Xcode, relaunched it, cleaned the project (command + K) and built it. It started to work again.
I do this routine whenever I face a new problem. It solves most of the problems as you might know. Sorry if you have done it already.

I supposed that you adding image to asset catalog in WatchKit Extension. This is wrong.You should add that image to asset catalog in WatchKit App. Sorry i can't add image here.

Try as I might, my images were not loaded up to the watch until I did it directly by 'caching' as follows in my InterfaceController in the WatchKit Extension:
[[WKInterfaceDevice currentDevice] addCachedImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"carrota.png"] name:#"carrot"];
[self.portfiolioImage setImageNamed:#"carrot"];

For me, it looks like you have added "hello" as an image name somewhere in the storyboard.
Use XCode's Find dialog to look for "hello". It will show use as an image name, too.

Screen Shot 1
Ok So the keything to note here is that "you do not want to drag and drop the images into the AssetCatalog"......the only way this worked for me was to manually right click on the catalog (as shown in screen shot 1 and "Add Files"....look for the image you want to add on your local/external drive (Making Sure that only the "WatchKit App" Checkmark is selected in the Add to Targets Section" as shown in Screen Shot 2) and add the images!!
Screen Shot 2

i've had the exact same problem. solution: i've exedently connected the group parenting the WKInterfaceLabel. Try setting YOURSUPPOSEDLABLE.setTextColor(.brown), if the Background of it changes, you have connected the group.

So in my case I had copied and pasted a prior row and assigned a diff class.
That duplicated row's group still had an IBOutlet connection to the prior class that I did not catch.
Once I removed that connection this stupid issue resolved itself and I was able to successfully call .setText()

Related

Could not load the "" image referenced from a nib

I have no images called "" (nothing). I've gone through the .xib file of the screen where this pops up and can't find anything that would cause this. Anybody who have had the same issue? Here is the full warning:
Could not load the "" image referenced from a nib in the bundle with
identifier "com.blah.Blah"
You can do this to check it from your storyboard, or nib.
Open it as Source Code:
Then "Find" the image name in it, see if it exists but already invalid in your project, probably you have deleted or changed its name, and now it doesn't seem valid.
I had the same issue and in my case there was an UIButton with an invalid image reference in the storyboard file. The reference wasn't empty so it was not trivial to spot by just searching for "" in the storyboard file. However, Xcode did show "Unknown image" for the button in the Background field instead of "Default Background Image". In the storyboard file it appeared as
<state key="normal" title="Use" backgroundImage="0E39AEA8-7F29-40B2-96B1-63B99047E8D5">
so perhaps grepping for backgroundImage and looking for non-familiar references will help find the cause.
I had this warning because of a UITabBarItem. In the attributes inspector for the field "Selected Image" I had a file listed that was also the value for the field "Image". Nevertheless, I received warnings until I made the "Selected Image" field blank.
Just for reference, this problem is also caused by using .jpg images and referencing them inside of storyboards/nibs. iOS 8 appears to be able to handle the proper type checking between jpg and png images at runtime. However, on iOS 7 and below you will need to manually set the image in the code and remove the image reference inside of the storyboard to get rid of the warning.
Remember you need to manually set the .jpg when referencing jpg images.
[self.imageView setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"yourImage.jpg"]];
I came looking for the answer. I searched my entire project and storyboard source code for "" and nowhere could I find it. The clue that the view that is displayed when the error appears is the one you need.
Open your xib or storyboard selecting the relevant viewController.
On the left click all grey arrows to expand the selection in your
view
look for the UIImageView icon (its the one with the palm tree)
select it and open the "Attributes inspector" on the right hand side.
In the ImageView section at the top in either or both Image and
Highlighted you will see greyed out "unknown image".
Use the drop down menu to change this from "unknown image" and build
run
voila
The nib (or ultimately the xib) that is the cause of the warning message is the one that is loaded when the message gets written. You then can look at the controls that use images in the inspector and find one where the image name is "Unknown image". You can then clear this value by setting it to some value and then clearing out the value. Note that with UIButton you'll need to try the four different values of "State Config" (Default, Highlighted, Selected & Disabled) to see where the invalid reference might be hiding.
In my case it was Unknown image in UIBarButtonItem in storyboard.
Very simple remove the image that is not displaying from you project and then clean the project by going to Product--> clean then once again put the image into your project and done. this worked for me.
In xcode 5.1 I had this same issue. The only way I could finally get it to work when using storyboard was to add the images as an image asset catalog. From what I read maybe they changed something in 5.1. I thought that storyboards don't have nibs - so it would make sense that asset catalog replaces the old method.
Project > General > App Icon Arrow > Import New Folder.
As soon as I did that the NIB references went away and my images showed up.
I'm using Asset Catalog on Xcode 6. Simply removing and re-adding the Asset Catalog fix the problem
in my situation, in my xib file,I had ever setup image name for some UIButton and UIImageView ,and delete these image name after sometime, but for unknown reason, these image still apear in the Interface Builder Editer, finally I reset these image name with any image name and delete them again,now problem resolved.
This worked for me:
1- Quit Xcode
2- Make a copy of your .storyboard for backup.
3- Open your .storyboard in a text editor and delete image nodes and image node attributes with empty references.
delete node like this --> <image name=" " .../>
delete image attributes like this --> <tabBarItem key="tabBarItem" title="untitled" image=" " id="6"/>
4- Save the file
5- Open your project again in Xcode.
6- Run Product->Clean
7- Run your project
Warning should be gone.
I had a very similiar problem which I eventually found. The line below was causing the problem using the open as source code method mentioned above.
<tabBarItem key="tabBarItem" title="Events"
image="319365D1-7058-46CD-8420-18E0EAFB2F29" id="a5a-IF-j9f"/>
I got this error from an undo action, simply dropping the image back onto the view controller solved the problem.
Atb
In my case it was because one of my button images was wrongly added to the Background Image container instead of the Image container (in the Inspector). I found it by going through the entire storyboard hierarchy and checking each image and button setting.
Please do a search for image= shows various results. Select results from nibs or storyboard open it, if there is some value like image="2342D4DF-1E6B-42B8-847A-F9F622921D02" delete it and enjoy.
i also faced same problem because i edited image in photoshop and saved as a psd format make sure you save your edited images in jpg or png format in my case that was the problem hope it helps!!!
I got this problem for all of my images after switching one of the label's text to 'attributed' and using one of the 'Fun' fonts. Even though I switch it back to 'plain' I still get the "Could not load..." error - until I re-load and re-reference all of my images again.
Initially my image name is "bg" When i found issue, i rename image as "background" but when click on image and hit "Show in Finder"changes was not reflected. image was name as "bg-1.jpg".
so i removed from project convert image to png and drag and drop into
project it works for me.
Believe or not, sometimes this happens because some IBOutlet was removed and in the storyboard have the reference to it.
Make sure the 'Target Membership' for the 'Assets.xcassets' has been selected.
Click 'Assets.xcassets'
In the 'File inspector', make sure 'Target Membership' selected.

Iphone add image to project

i am new to iphone app development i was going through a tutorial and add images to project but unfortunately some time the images are available in dropdown for uiimageview and sometime they are not, can somebody help me why it is happening?
Regards
You can type the name of an image file into that dropdown field if dropdown doesn't show it.
Ensure that your images are both present in the filesystem and also imported into the project. If you still have trouble, restart IB.

Images in iPhone app appear in Simulator, but not when compiled to device

I am learning iPhone development, and have built a simple app that has an image that changes to another image when you tap it.
If i build it to the simulator, it works fine, but if i build it to the device the images dont appear. i feel like they aren't being copied across. I have checked they have been named correctly and i have made sure i imported them to 'resources'
I dont think it is a problem with the code because i added a thing to also make text appear when the image is tapped, and this works, so a button is still there doing something, it just doesn't have an image on it.
-(IBAction)changeImage:(id)sender {
[fortuneCookieButton setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"Image2.jpg"] forState:UIControlStateNormal];
label.hidden = NO;
}
-(IBAction)restoreImage:(id)sender {
[fortuneCookieButton setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"Image1.jpg"] forState:UIControlStateNormal];
label.hidden = YES;
}
Does the case (upper/lower) of all your file names match exactly for all letters? Source code & project & Mac?
just to share with you, I had this same problem and I found out the solution: I was using lower case in the file name and upper case in code. The thing is on Simulator there was no problem because Mac file system is case-insensitive but in the iPad it didn't work because iOS file system is case sensitive. ;-)
I had this problem. Bizarrely the image had been working in the past, then just stopped appearing on the device one day.
It was a PNG.
I opened it in GIMP and saved it again. Then it went back to working again. No idea why.
Crazy.
Is it the case with only PNG images or also for JPG & other format you're having same issue. If it's only for PNG image, then it might be possible they're not being compressed. Try the following way.
Select your project target & go into its info. Here go into the build tab. In the configuration select "All Configurations" from Configuration section. Now, write "COMPRESS_PNG_FILES' in the search bar. And see the status of the check-box. IF it's unchecked, then make it checked & it will work. But if it's already checked, then there should be other reason in your project.
In the later case, I would request you to create a new dummy project & check by adding 2-3 images whether it's coming or not.
Clear caches delete the previous build and try again.
I also had same problem, and it was caused by a different reason: my project has image files with the same name! Since my app has many images, I inadvertently included images with the same name. Simulator is more tolerant and show the images just fine; however, when built on device, neither of the images of the same name were copied to the build directory. Obviously xcode is more picky for device: since all images go to the same directory, the file names must be different. When there are files with the same name, xcode refuses to copy any of them since it doesn't know which one to pick.
I have the same problem. In my case, the issues is to do with the UILabel above the UIImageView that shows the image. When I change the type of UILabel to AttributedText (In Property Inspector), my real devices cannot load the image. When I change it back to Plain, it works now. I use XCode 6.2.
on top of all suggestions - it wasn't work for me until I restarted the device

Images in Interface Builder when using MonoTouch

I'm new to MonoTouch and iPhone development. I have my images (PNG) in a resources folder in MonoDevelop, however if I want to set the image property for a button in Interface Builder, how do I do that? It's always a blank dropdown. Do I need to use XCode to access the XIB file and then somehow embed the button image file I'll need in it?
This is a known limitation of MonoDevelop and Interface Builder. To add images to an XIB in Interface Builder they must be part of an XCode project, which of course coming from MonoDevelop they're not.
To achieve what you're trying to do you will need to set the image via code, and ensure the build action of your image is set to Content. To do this, simply right click your image inside MonoDevelop, and select Build Action > Content.
On your view with the button on it, create an outlet in Interface Builder for your button, hook it up, then from code to set your image, you just need to use the .FromFile("path/name") method of UIImage.
UIImage buttonImage = UIImage.FromFile ("resources/image.png");
myButton.SetBackgroundImage (buttonImage,UIControlState.Normal);
That's off the top of my head, but I think that should do it.
You can manually set the image in Interface Builder, but it wont show up until run time. The image name can include a path, e.g. "images/settings.png".
All solutions given here are completely wrong and misleading. All you need to do, is place your images in the Resources folder (on the project root), and add your images to this folder. After adding files to this folder, mark all files and make sure their build action is set to BundleResource.
I also needed this to work, here is a workaround I found.
You need to create a dummy xcode project. Place it in the same folder as your project.
Add all your xib files and image files to that xcode project by dragging them in when the project is opened in xcode. Now you will be able to see the preview of the images.
The image files must be in the same folder as the project file and xcode must be opened with the dummy project while the interface builder is opened.
Not great - but solves the issue for now.
Here is a sample project I have created.
For this issue to be resolved on the MonoDevelop side - some inter-process communication code needs to be created, I think that a good starting point will be looking for "PBXProjectWatcherServerConnection-3.1.2" in google.

iPhone simulator shows app's images but iPhone does not

I have create an application on iphone using objective-c.In this application i am just displaying different players images stored in one folder, which will be run perfectly on simulator. But when I deploy it on iphone it is not showing the images of the player.
for that the code is:
UIImageView *imageplayer = [[UIImageView alloc]initWithFrame: CGRectMake(imgx, imgy+45,135,150)];
imageplayer.image = [UIImage imageNamed:playerpng];
if(imageplayer.image == nil)
[imageplayer setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:playerjpg]];
if(imageplayer.image == nil)
[imageplayer setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:#"noimage.png"]];
[self.view addSubView:imageplayer];
Plz solve this query.
Thanks in advance
Sometimes xCode doesent update correctly the bundle, try cleaning and building again.
I am currently experiencing this problem as well. I was able to correct it after a bit of debugging and reviewing the build file.
When I do an ls -l, I noticed that some of my png files have a # symbol beside the permissions. When I followed that up with a ls -l#, it showed that the files with an '#' had an attribute set 'com.apple.quarantine'. This attribute is given to a file (often from a zip, jar, or other executable) that is downloaded from the net. You can get rid of this attribute by performing:
xattr -d com.apple.quarantine *.png
Then, select the images in XCode, and check that the checkbox under the target is checked. In my case, it was not, so the images weren't being included in the bundle.
I had the same problem, solved by using all lowercase for the file name in code - image.jpg, but it does not seem to make any difference what case the actual file name is, e.g. Image.jpg
check name of image file. It must be "noimage.png"
not Noimage.png or noimage.PNG
Just to clarify, does the "noimage.png" display, or is the program loading a player image but failing to display it? Or is nothing loading.
These should easily be determined in debug mode.
A few additional things to check...
1) Just for testing, start out with PNG versions of the player files. This is the primary format on the iPhone and might eliminate a file format issue or other anomaly that the simulator is not sensitive to.
2) With regard to fixing in an image editor, specifically make sure that the image is set to a DPI of 72 pixels/inch. The iPhone and particularly Interface Builder are very sensitive to this being correct and will sometimes not display or will display a very blurred version of the image if incorrect.
3) Make sure the image(s) haven't been added multiple times (from different directories and/or to different group folders). We encountered a situation where we had inadvertently imported the same images at two different layers within the project hierarchy and this can cause unexpected behavior within the iPhone (selecting randomly or failing to select).
4) Make sure the Get Info -> Targets has your particular target checked. The simulator may still see the image but it will not get deployed to the iPhone.
5) Make sure you can view the image within XCode and that it looks correct.
Barney
This happens to me sometimes. I once spent half a night trying to figure out what was wrong. In this end, this is what worked: open the image with an image editor and save it again. That's all. I'm using the free Acorn image editor to do this. Haven't tried it with Photoshop. (After all, it seems that Photoshop might be responsible for introducing the error in the first place, although that's far from sure.)
I don't know what causes the problem. I usually get it when I use png files that have been sent to me. Could be a simple file permissions problem, or some more subtle problem with the image format. I would be very interested in hearing the opinion of better-informed people.
In any case, if all else fails just try this: open the image with Acorn, save over the original file. Works for me.
Make sure the image files are added to your XCode project.
After some investigation, Michael's comment seems to have a solved it for me. I had all lower case as the file name but was following variable convention and had the png file with an upper case for the second part of the file name. Here my file was putback.png but was referenced in my code as putBack.png
UIImage *putBackImage = [UIImage imageNamed:#"putBack.png"]; //wrong
UIImage *putBackImage = [UIImage imageNamed:#"putback.png"]; //correct
Select correct target while adding image files to your project. Following are steps to make it further clear
Select Add Files to "YourProjectName"
In opening window there is an "Add to targets" option at bottom that shows all available targets
Check target or multiple targets in which you want to add images
Press "Add" button and you are ready to go