I have two views. viewController and myCustomAlert. i have added myCustomAlert as a subview in viewController.
this is the function which is called when myCustomAlert is added as a subview.
-(void)ratingAction:(id)sender
{
if ([sender isKindOfClass:[UIButton class]])
{
[[NSBundle mainBundle] loadNibNamed:#"myCustomAlert" owner:self options:nil
];
Custom_view.frame = CGRectMake(10, 100, 287, 165);
[self.view addSubview:Custom_view];
self.view.userInteractionEnabled = false;
Custom_view.userInteractionEnabled = true;
}
}
i want parent view to be disabled so i disable the userinteraction but it disable the subview too. how to do that?? i want my subview to work like an alert.
One approach you can try is set subviews frame in a way that it completely hides its super view controller i.e. 0,0,320,460 and make sure that the content on subviews are properly placed at position where you want, and then make the background color of subview transparent.
myCustomAlert.backgroundColor = [UIColor clearColor];
when you add a subview to a specific view, the subview and parent become one view collectively, i.e. the parent view. so disabling interaction will disable both.
for you is to present modelview controller with animated property as false and disable parent view interaction. tell me if you achieve your goal
Related
Hi In my app Intially i loaded a view from app delegate. Next when some button click on this root view I added this code.
-(IBAction)method
{
View1 *v1=[[View1 alloc] init];
CGRect frame = CGRectMake(0.0f, 100.0f, 320.0f, 250.0f);
v1.view.frame=frame;
hideView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame: CGRectMake(0,0,320,480)];
hideView.backgroundColor = [UIColor blackColor];
hideView.alpha =0.8;
[hideView addSubview:v1.view];
[self.view addSubview:hideView];
}
In above code View1 is another view controller and hide view is just a view in root view controller. Now totally for Root view controller two views are added. Now my question is i want to remove the two added subviews from Root view when i clicked on table cell. how to do this? And also when i added this sub views to root view scrolling also not possible to table view and saying bad access error how to resolve this? Or any other ways to do this.
You can set unique tag to any view (subview) to easily retrieve reference to them later.
In your case, for example, you can add following lines:
v1.tag = 10112;
hideView = 10113;
And get references to that views later you can type:
//view - is a root view of that subviews
View1 *v1 = [view viewWithTag:10112];
UIView *hideView = [view viewWithTag:10113];
// and now you are able to remove them:
[v1 removeFromSuperview];
[hideView removeFromSuperview];
If View1 is inside hideView, so you can just call [hideView removeFromSuperView]; to remove both, or just use the #Nekto solution to recognize the view you want to remove.
For the scrolling issue, it's normal that if you add a view on top of the UITableView you're going to loss the table's scrolling, you could look at hitTest method of UIView.
I am new to iPad developer,
I made one Registration form in my application, when i see my application in Portrait mode,
i am able to see whole form with no scrolling, but when i see same form in Landscape mode, i am not able to see part which is at bottom of page, for that a scrolling should be there to see bottom part.
:
In my .h file when i replace
#interface ReminderPage : UIViewController{
...
...
}
:UIViewController with :UIScrollView
and then when i add label in my .m file like this,
UILabel *Lastpaidlbl = [[[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(70 ,400, 130, 50)]autorelease];
Lastpaidlbl.backgroundColor = [UIColor greenColor];
Lastpaidlbl.font=[UIFont systemFontOfSize:20];
Lastpaidlbl.text = #"Lastpaid on :";
[self.view addSubview:Lastpaidlbl];
I am getting error on last line Property view not found on object of type classname.
i am unable to add label in my view.
Any help will be appreciated.
The question appears to be really asking how can all the components on the screen be placed inside a UIScrollView, rather than a UIView. Using Xcode 4.6.3, I found I could achieve this by simply:
In Interface Builder, select all the sub-views inside the main UIView.
Choose Xcode menu item "Editor | Embed In | Scroll View".
The end result was a new scroll view embedded in the existing main UIView, will all the former sub-views of the UIView now as sub-views of the UIScrollView, with the same positioning.
If you want to replace your UIViewController with a UIScrollView, you will have to go a bit of refactoring to your code. The error you get is just an example of that:
the syntax:
[self.view addSubview:Lastpaidlbl];
is correct if self is a UIViewController; since you changed it to be UIScrollView, you should now do:
[self addSubview:Lastpaidlbl];
You will have quite a few changes like this one to make to your code and will face some issues.
Another approach would be this:
instantiate a UIScrollView (not derive from it);
add your UIView (such as you have defined it) to the scroll view;
define the contentSize of the scroll view so to include the whole UIView you have.
The scroll view acts as a container for your existing view (you add your controls to the scroll view, then add the scroll view to self.view); this way, you could integrate it within your existing controller:
1. UIScrollView* scrollView = <alloc/init>
2. [self.view addSubview:scrollView]; (in your controller)
3. [scrollView addSubview:<label>]; (for all of your labels and fields).
4. scrollView.contentSize = xxx;
I think the latter approach will be much easier.
Please put all of your UIComponents to the UIScrollview and then it will start scrolling.
please look in to content size. please change it according to the orientation of device.
You're subclassing UIScrollView, so there is no self.view because already self is the view (of the scrollview). You dont need to subclass the scrollview, you can just embed your components in a ivar scrollview and set its contentSize (in your case, you have to enable the scrolling just when the device is in landscape mode). In interface builder you can embed the selected elements in one click, Editor-> Embed in-> scrollview.
First create scrollview
UIScrollView * scr=[[UIScrollView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(10, 70, 756, 1000)];
scr.backgroundColor=[UIColor clearColor];
[ self.view addSubview:scr];
second
change [self.view addSubview:Lastpaidlbl];
to
[scr addSubview:Lastpaidlbl];
third
set height depends on content
UIView *view = nil;
NSArray *subviews = [scr subviews];
CGFloat curXLoc = 0;
for (view in subviews)
{
CGRect frame = view.frame;
curXLoc += (frame.size.height);
}
// set the content size so it can be scrollable
[scr setContentSize:CGSizeMake(756, curXLoc)];
Finally
- (BOOL)shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation:(UIInterfaceOrientation)interfaceOrientation {
// Override to allow orientations other than the default portrait orientation.
if (interfaceOrientation==UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeLeft || interfaceOrientation==UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeRight) {
self.scr.frame = CGRectMake(0, 0, 703,768);
} else {
self.scr.frame = CGRectMake(0, 0, 768, 1024);
}
return YES;
}
In My view there is reset button .i need userinteraction disabled except for that button .how can i do that can any one share the code.thanks in advance?
btn1 is your button, self.view - your view
for (UIView *view in self.view.subviews)
view.userInteractionEnabled=NO;
btn1.userInteractionEnabled=YES;
For all the elements there is a property userinteractionenabled. Set it to false
yourelement.userInteractionEnabled = NO;
Also place your UIButton on top of your view hierachy.
Other option is to place a tranparent UIButton on your entire view and your UIButton on top of this view. This way only your UIButton is touch enalbed. Other touches would be taken in by the transparent button which does nothing.
Sligthly better approach, define a "magic value" that will help you :
#define kDontDisableUserInteraction 3928473
then set this value as the tag of your button you don't want disabled:
[resetButton setTag:kDontDisableUserInteraction];
you can now create a function in your superview's class :
- (void)setInterfaceEnabled:(BOOL)newEnabled {
for (UIView *subview in self.subviews) {
if (subView.tag != kDontDisableUserInteraction)
continue;
subView.userInteractionEnabled = newEnabled;
}
}
That allows you to create other non-disableable buttons simply by giving them the right tag (which can be whatever int value you want, not only 3928473, depends on your #define).
i have a UIView that is smaller than the superview so i can represent this view as a modal view when a button is clicked.
I have managed to do the following:
* add a subview to the superview.
* centered this modal view
I am now trying to make the elements behind the UIView unclickable. And also add a grey shadow te the ourside of my modal view so that the user understands that the modal view is the view in focus.
I would like to know how to achieve this.
I do not wish to use the presentation modal transition. I know and have already implemented this in other projects.
Any help is appreciated.
The simplest thing would be to lay a fullscreen UIView with a translucent gray background behind your "modal" view. Then it will intercept all of the touches. It might look something like this:
UIView *dimBackgroundView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:theSuperview.bounds];
dimBackgroundView.backgroundColor = [[UIColor grayColor] colorWithAlphaComponent:.5f];
[theSuperview addSubview:dimBackgroundView];
[theSuperview addSubview:modalView];
For future reference, you can set myView.userInteractionEnabled = NO to disable touch events on a view.
There are several ways to do it.
If you have a custom view which has custom location, you can modify it like that:
Create an instance var:
UIView* backgroundView;
And whenever you need it, put it behind your custom view:
if (backgroundView == nil)
backgroundView = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, [UIScreen mainScreen].bounds.size.height, [UIScreen mainScreen].bounds.size.width)];
backgroundView.backgroundColor = [[UIColor grayColor] colorWithAlphaComponent:.5f];
[self.view addSubview:backgroundView];
[backgroundView animateBump:customView.view];
[backgroundView addSubview:customView.view];
When you do not need it anymore
[backgroundView removeFromSuperview];
I'm trying to do something that shouldn't be that complicated, but I can't figure it out.
I have a UIViewController displaying a UITableView. I want to present a context menu when the user press on a row. I want this to be a semi-transparent view with labels and buttons.
I could use an AlertView, but I want full control on the format of the labels and buttons and will like to use Interface Builder.
So I created my small view 250x290, set the alpha to .75 and create a view controller with the outlets to handle the different user events.
Now I want to present it.
If I use presentModalViewController two (undesired) things happen
1) the view covers all of the screen (but the status bar).
2) It is semi-transparent, but what I see "behind" it its not the parent view but the applications root view.
Ive tried adding it as a subview, but nothing happens, so Im not doing something right:
RestaurantContextVC* modalViewController = [[[RestaurantContextVC alloc] initWithNibName:#"RestaurantContextView" bundle:nil] autorelease];
[self.view addSubview:modalViewController.view];
Is it possible to do what I want?
Thanks in advance.
Gonso
I'm coding similar thing. My approach include.....
Not using dismissModalViewControllerAnimated and presentModalViewController:animated.
Design a customized full sized view in IB. In its viewDidLoad message body, set the background color to clearColor, so that space on the view not covered by controllers are transparent.
I put a UIImageView under the controllers of the floating view. The UIImageView contains a photoshoped image, which has rounded corners and the background is set to transparent. This image view serves as the container.
I uses CoreAnimation to present/dismiss the floating view in the modal view style: (the FloatingViewController.m)
- (void)viewDidLoad
{
[super viewDidLoad];
[self.view setBackgroundColor:[UIColor clearColor]];
[UIView beginAnimations:nil context:nil];
[self.view setFrame:CGRectMake(0, 480, 320, 480)];
[UIView setAnimationDuration:0.75f];
[self.view setFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, 320, 480)];
[UIView commitAnimations];
}
wangii
Thats pretty much the solution I found.
I load the view with loadNibNamed and then just add it on top with addSubView, like this:
//Show a view on top of current view with a wait indicator. This prevents all user interactions.
-(void) showWaitView{
NSArray* nibViews = [[NSBundle mainBundle] loadNibNamed:#"WaitView" owner:self options:nil];
#ifdef __IPHONE_2_1
waitView = [ nibViews objectAtIndex: 0];
#else
waitView = [ nibViews objectAtIndex: 1];
#endif
CGFloat x = self.view.center.x - (waitView.frame.size.width / 2);
CGFloat y = self.view.center.y - (waitView.frame.size.height / 2);
[waitView setFrame:CGRectMake(x,y,waitView.bounds.size.width,waitView.bounds.size.height)];
[self.view addSubview:waitView];
}
Could you elaborate on points 3 and 4?
What I did to give the view the round rect aspect is put it inside a round rect button.
This code will actually allow you to have a small floating view, but if the view is smaller that its parent, the user could interact with the visible part of the parent.
In the end I create my view with the same size, but kept the code just in case.
Gonso
I would strongly consider using a navigation controller to slide in your subview instead of overlaying it. This is the expected model and any small benefit you may think you'll get by doing it your own way will be greatly offset by the principle of (least) surprise.
If you really really have to do it this way, I believe the trick is to add the first table view as a subview of a transparent "holding" view that the view controller maintains. Then add your new sub view as another subview of that.
Again, if you really want to do this, instead of adding a transparent "holding" view, since this pop-up is essentially modal, I would make it a subview directly of the window.
You might want to put in a transparent black shield behind it to prevent touches on the background and focus input on the popup.
But seriously, consider either popping a controller on the stack or using that alert view. Unless you've hired a $$ designer, it's probably not going to look appropriate on the iPhone.
What I did was create a UIViewController on top of my UINavigation controller in my app delegate and made it a property of a singleton object for convenience:
- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions {
//--- create root navigation controller
self.window.rootViewController = self.navigationController;
//--- create view controller for popups:
popupViewController = [[BaseViewController alloc] init];
popupViewController.view.backgroundColor = [UIColor clearColor];
popupViewController.view.hidden = true; //for rendering optimisation
[self.window addSubview:popupViewController.view];
[AppState sharedInstance].popupViewController = self.popupViewController;
//--- make all visible:
[self.window makeKeyAndVisible];
return YES;
}
At any point in my app, I can then call e.g.
MyViewController * myVC = [[UIViewController alloc] init];
//... set up viewcontroller and its view...
// add the view of the created view controller to the popup view:
[AppState sharedInstance].popupViewController.view.hidden = false;
[[AppState sharedInstance].popupViewController.view addSubview:myVC.view];
The BaseViewController used on the top just inherits from UIViewController and sets up a full-screen view:
//----- in BaseViewController implementation
- (void)loadView {
//------- create root view:
CGRect frame = [[AppState sharedInstance] getScreenFrame];
rootView = [[VCView alloc] initWithFrame:frame];
rootView.backgroundColor = [UIColor whiteColor];
self.view = rootView;
}