I have a very large form to build in my ipad application and I'm note sure which approach( between create multiple views in or multiple viewcontrollers ) to follow. Well, I have decided to split may form in logical sections, so I want use a splitviewcontroller with a root( a tableviewcontroller with the sections) and multipleviecontrollers for each sections. When the user select a row in tableview I will show the correspondent viewcontroller. I'm saving a reference for each viewcontroller in my app_delegate and the app_delegate also is the responsible for change the viewcontrollers. Is this the best approach? There is other approach to follow? About the multiple view I was thinking to put multiple view in the same xib file and then choose based in tag as the use tap the row in rootviewcontroller's tableview.
Thanks in advance. And sorry for my bad english.. Learning!
I will say this on the subject: currently, having multiple view controllers on the screen at the same time can be problematic if you're not using one of Apple's existing classes, such as a UISplitViewController.
The main issue is that important events your view controllers will want to respond to (rotation events, etc) won't be passed down to them. It's not a huge pain, it's just something to need to take into account - you'd typically create your own parent view controller that could pass these events down to its children.
Now, you are using a split view controller, so alls well on that front. There is no provided way for detail and master controllers in a split view controller to communicate with each other, but Apple recommend you employ a standard delegation pattern. If your application is fairly simple this could certainly happen in your app delegate as you do now.
If you're targeting iOS 5 only there are some changes that are relevant regarding multiple controllers on the screen at the same time, but I can't discuss them on here because of the NDA. You should go to Apple's developer forums (devforums.apple.com) to learnmore.
Sounds like I'm trying to do the same thing as you (large insurance forms here, how about your project?) Unfortunately I can't help out as you're a bit ahead of me. I've been able to flip back and forth between 8 detail views by tapping on the 8 rows in my UITableViewController, without keeping a reference to either the current or previous one anywhere. The data I enter into various TextFields stays where it should.
I currently have a xxxViewController.h/.m and corresponding .xib file for each detail view. That's an awful lot of code, but I couldn't see any other way to do it. Now I'm having a problem getting my button pressed handlers to fire. Also I've still got to put a database behind these screens.
Were you able to overcome your issue?
Thanks,
Jeff in Alabama
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My goal is to have a main view, then swipe right to go to the next view, and again for the 3rd (so 3 different view controllers, all showing different information that is related to the main view), which seems to me like one of the most common features in most apps. Creating segues to other view controllers via buttons or tabs is super easy (just click and drag), but for some reason they make this common feature stupidly complicated for something that should be just as easy as simple segues in the storyboard.
I first started out researching the page view controller, only to find out that's not what I wanted and was too annoying to work with.
I think I found out that Container View is what I need, creating child views and what not. Does anyone know a good step by step tutorial to show you how to set all this up in the storyboard, like, a dummy's guide? I'm a severe novice, so a lot of the docs people point me towards have broken links, outdated code, or might as well be ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics.
Oh, and I'm learning Swift, not objective C!
It doesn't sound like you need to do anything other than use multiple view controllers to swipe through, passing data from one to the next, and so forth. I don't think using multiple views (parent / child views) is actually what you're after.
This is a very simple tutorial that will explain how to pass data through segues.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guSYMPaXLaw
I want to hear developers opinions on the best way to swap views on the iphone.
For example, I have a tab bar and one of its tabs defaults to a login view. When The user logs in the view changes to a logged in view.
I was going to just use one view controller and have all the content in one xib hiding and showing content as needed but this seems in no way elegant.
Secondly I was considering having one viewcontroller and simply swapping the xib. I'm a litle reluctant to try this as I've read in an article or 2 that it can lead to memory leaks.
Finally I was considering using 2 view controllers with with 2 seperate xibs. My gut tells me this would probably be the "proper" solution but I so far have failed to hunt down any sample code on the correct way to do it.
Can you offer advice on the best way to solve this problem?
Is there a technique that I have not listed?
Thanks.
I would keep the logic for which view to show in the view controller. The XIB is the view itself, and should have no objects in it that are transient or not always visible for that particular view.
Your second approach (of swapping the views) seems to be the right approach to me, and is always something I, personally, do in these situations. I am not aware of any memory issues if you do it right (remove from superview, followed by loading the new view as a subview of the controller's view). You could perform any custom initialization once the new XIB has been loaded and before showing it to the user.
Multiple view controllers just seems superfluous as then you would ideally require another top level controller to manage the two view controllers.
I'm learning how to develop my own iPhone apps but I'm having a tough time understanding certain concepts.
First, am i right to say that for every view, there must be a view controller for it? And for every view controller, must there be a delegate for it?
Also, what is the role of mainWindow.nib? Most of the tutorials that i've read don't seem to touch that nib at all. What always happens is the setting up of a NavigationController as the root controller, which pushes another ViewController onto the stack and this ViewController will have another nib associated with it.
So can i assume that i can safely ignore the main window nib?
It's all about MVC (Model View Controller), innit?
The Model, well that's up to you - what does your app do? Think of it as the backend, the engine of your app, free of the cruft of font size decisions and touch events.
The View, Apple pretty much wrote that for you. You use their Textfields and tables and imageViews. You assemble them together using Interface Builder into your GUI (packaged as a .nib). You rarely, if ever need to subclass the standard view elements (in a game you want a custom View to draw to, as all your drawing is probably custom). You can break different parts of your GUI into different .nib files if this helps you manage them. It's entirely up to you.
The Controller, so you have probably got some work todo to enable your GUI to represent your model. You need Some Controllers. How many? However many is manageable by you. If you had a view containing 2 subviews would they each need a view controller? Nah, probably not. How complicated is your code to hook up the view to the model?
Some GUI patterns are so common that Apple even wrote the Controller code for you. EG the controller for a UINavigationBar, UINavigationController. So, if your app has hierarchical views that you need to navigate around and you need to display a navigation bar you can use an instance of UINavigationController instead of writing your own class. Yay!
Surely tho, the UINavigationController code (or any other viewController) can't magically know how to integrate with our model, with our view, can it? NO, it can't. In general in Cocoa if there is some class of object that mostly works off the shelf but also has optionally configurable behavoir - allowing us to tailor it to our needs - it is done by Delegation. ie Instead of subclassing UINavigationController we tell the specific instance of it where to find (for want of a better term) it's custom behavoir.
Why? Let's say you have a navigationController, a tableView and a textfield. UINavigationController mostly take care of your navigation needs but you have to have a crazy QUACK sound play each time the user moves to a new view. UITableView is mostly exactly everything you need from a table, EXCEPT you really want the third row in the table on the front page be twice the height of the other rows. And the standard, off -the-shelf UITextField pretty much takes care of your textfield needs EXCEPT you need your textfield to only be editable when the user is facing North. One way to handle this would be to create 3 new classes, a custom UINavigationController, a custom tableView and a custom textfield, and to use these instead. With delegation we could use the classes as they are and have one object be the delegate of all 3 instances - much cleaner.
Delegation is mostly optional, the docs will tell you when, and it's down to you and whether you need that custom behavoir.
I'm starting out in iPhone development, and I'm trying to do a Contacts-style controller to add items to a table. I've got the two controllers designed, but I can't seem to figure out how to pass data between them. How can I get data from the modal controller to its parent?
Just trying to call methods on parentViewController won't work (and results in compiler warnings and crashes). I've considered moving the data out of the controller itself (which is going to happen anyway, I'm just trying to keep things as simple as possible for now), but even then I still have to somehow tell the parent view to refresh its data. Again, how can I do this?
I've considered moving the data out of the controller itself (which is going to happen anyway
I think now may be the time to follow that consideration and create a separate "ContactList" model object to store your data.
Your modal view controller just adds new "Contacts" into the "ContactList".
Your TableViewController should observe the same "ContactList". As items are added/removed to/from the "ContactList" your TableViewController will simply add and remove rows from its tableView.
In this way you will keep each ViewController independent, your code will be more flexible and adding/removing single rows will be much more efficient than reloading an entire tableView.
You either keep a link to the sub view you create and ask it for data that has changed on return, or else ad yourself as a delegate of a subview and have it call you back directly (which does work if you have a valid reference).
I had the same question and found this sample code: http://developer.apple.com/iphone/library/samplecode/LocateMe/Introduction/Intro.html
Helped me a ton and was pretty easy to figure out from the code.
In short, use delegate.
I would suggest you have a look at Lecture 11: Text input, Presenting content modally (May 6) - iPhone App Programming course offered by Stanford. Search for it on iTunes U.
Download this sample app if you want to know how to implement delegate: http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs193p/downloads/11-Pickers.zip
What is the best approach to implement tabs that look like web applications on the iPhone, like the screenshot below (notice the "Checkin-Info-Friends" tabs)? These are not part of the UIKit standard library, but seems to be very common lately.
I've spent considerable time developing applications for the iPhone, but not developing controls like that one. What would be the best approach here:
create a new UIView for each tab content, and add the three subviews to the mainview straight away?
create new UIViews only when the user clicks on each of the tabs?
Put all the content in a UIScrollView, and just change the page as the user clicks on each tab?
Maybe there are open source controls for this out there? I couldn't find anything.
(source: foursquaregame.com)
My approach to a similar problem was to make all 4 (in my case) tab views, but respond to didReceiveMemoryWarning by releasing all but the current tab view. (Then, of course, you must make sure that you create the new view, if it doesn't exist, when the user chooses a new tab.)
I thought this was a good compromise - a speedy reaction to the user at first (and in my case memory footprint is at its lowest at this point in my app), and then a response to low memory to avoid being shot.
I think it best just to have three UIView* references to the subviews in the parent view or view controller, all initially null, then to have subroutine to hide the other two views if they are visible and either construct and show or just show the new view. Assuming no extraordinary memory requirements.
I think with such a small screen area load/unload concerns at the subview level are unlikely to be a concern, but if the parent views need to be loaded/unloaded, the subviews should all go (be both hidden and unloaded), and on reload, loadView should call the routine described in the last paragraph at startup.
If there is in fact a great deal of memory or resource use by any of the three subviews, then my advice is reversed and each of the subviews and/or any memory-intensive objects behind them should be not only hidden but unloaded whenever possible. I think with your use of Google maps there, a need to unload when hidden might apply to that.
Is this th right point to make? Is there some extra detail I'm missing?
You can have each tab be a real view controller with nib and everything. The only catch is that you must forward on the standard view controller calls you want to receive (viewWillAppear, etc) but it makes the coding much cleaner since you code just as you would for any other view (although for a smaller space).
You call each controllers "view" property to get out the view, which you add as a subview of a container view you have under the tabs.
If all three are table views, you might get away with using a single UITableViewController that changes contents based on the selected tab. Otherwise I second KHG's comment of using real view controllers to back up each of the subviews.
For the tabs themselves consider subclassing UISegmentedControl.