Why doesn’t ABPersonViewController show any properties besides the name? - iphone

For some reason, ABPersonViewController is unwilling to display any properties aside from the name, no matter what properties are set for it to display.
I’m unable to use the AddressBookUI controllers to let a user select a contact to display, since my UI has custom requirements, otherwise I’d go that route (as Apple does in their sample project.)
Here’s the code that doesn’t work — am I missing something?
- (void)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView didSelectRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath
{
// ABContact is of my own creation
ABContact *contact = [self contactAtIndexPath: indexPath];
ABPersonViewController *viewController = [[ABPersonViewController alloc] init];
// This returns a valid ABRecordRef, as indicated by the fact that the
// controller does display the name of this contact when it is loaded
viewController.displayedPerson = contact.record;
// Copied directly from Apple’s QuickContacts sample project
NSArray *displayedItems = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:[NSNumber numberWithInt:kABPersonPhoneProperty],
[NSNumber numberWithInt:kABPersonEmailProperty],
[NSNumber numberWithInt:kABPersonBirthdayProperty], nil];
viewController.displayedProperties = displayedItems;
[self.navigationController pushViewController: viewController animated: YES];
[viewController release];
}

ABContact is from Erica Sadun's ObjC wrapper (ABContactsHelper), right?
I'm using it too and found that for some reason, Apple's ABPersonViewController somehow treats supplied ABRecordRef as contact.record differently than if you directly use C functions.
Thus this:
ABContact *person = ...;
ABPersonViewController *personVC = ...;
personVC.displayedPerson = person.record;
will load almost nothing into the controller. Sometimes first/last name, sometimes not even that. However, if you do this:
ABContact *person = ...;
ABPersonViewController *personVC = ...;
ABAddressBookRef addressBook = ABAddressBookCreate();
personVC.displayedPerson = ABAddressBookGetPersonWithRecordID(addressBook, person.recordID);
then it will load everything.
Previous answer says that ABAddressBookCreate is required for the constants to have a value, but this is already done in [ABContactsHelper addressBook] call (first thing I call in my code). This it's really puzzling where it gets lost. But the previous does work, consistently.

The key is not to release the ABAddressBookRef before displaying the view controller. I create a static instance in an +initialize method and keep it around.

The value of these constants is undefined until one of the following functions has been called: ABAddressBookCreate, ABPersonCreate, ABGroupCreate.
The above is come from apple document. I think those property constants are not valid for above reason.

This list of properties only affects displaying "properties choosing dialog" (after person has been choosen). Person contact's properties like first, middle, last names, company, etc. are always the same (in both dialogs). If you include kABPersonFirstNameProperty, kABPersonMiddleNameProperty, etc. keys in the list they are ignored, only kABPersonPhoneProperty, kABPersonEmailProperty, etc. have effect.

Related

How to get NSString variable value from NSObject to ViewController

I am trying to set up an object to control all of my data so it can set things up in the background to it appears my tableviews load faster than they do now etc.
This is what I am trying to achieve.
I am setting a variable in the NSObject from the secondVC when the tableviewcell is selected like this:
- (void)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView didSelectRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath
{
//Access selected cells content (cell.textLabel.text)
UITableViewCell *cell = [tableView cellForRowAtIndexPath:indexPath];
//Parent view logic (sends info back to the correct cell in parent view)
if (parentViewSelectedIndexPath.section == 0)
{
if (parentViewSelectedIndexPath.row == 0)
{
//Predicates restrict the values that will be returned from the query
NSPredicate *predicate = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:#"%K like %#",#"MANUFACTURER",cell.textLabel.text];
NSArray *filterArray = [myDataArray filteredArrayUsingPredicate:predicate];
//[[self delegate] setManufactureSearchFields:filterArray withIndexPath:indexPath]; //This is where I pass the value back to the mainview
//Using Object
VehicleControllerNSObject *vehicleControllerNSObject = [[VehicleControllerNSObject alloc] init];
[vehicleControllerNSObject setFirstCell:filterArray];
}
//etc
At the end there you can see the method that is getting set up in the VechicleControllerNSObject which looks like this.
-(void)setFirstCell:(NSArray *)array{
manufactureSearchObjectStringFVC = [[array valueForKey:#"MANUFACTURER"] objectAtIndex:0];
NSLog(#"%#", manufactureSearchObjectStringFVC); // this prints the correct value to the console
}
As you can see this prints the correct output fine.
however I have no idea how to call manufactureSearchObjectStringFVC and pass the value it holds into the uitableviewcell that I would like to pass it in on my firstviewcontroller.
This is what I have for testing atm.
- (void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[super viewDidAppear:animated];
VehicleControllerNSObject *vehicleControllerNSObject = [[VehicleControllerNSObject alloc] init];
manufactureSearchObjectString = vehicleControllerNSObject.manufactureSearchObjectStringFVC;
NSLog(#"%#", vehicleControllerNSObject.manufactureSearchObjectStringFVC);
}
That nslog prints null..
I have three questions
1, how do I get the correct value into the first valuecontroller.
2, should I be using viewDidAppear like this?.. I think not.. how can I do this better
3, Do you think this is a good way of doing this type of thing, as in the future i would like to use the NSObjectClass to parse info, cache etc all behind the senses leaving the views to just display when the data is ready hopefully helping performance..
Any help would be hugely appreciated as I really want to learn this stuff as i know its important for me to know.
Your question is so beautifully and clearly formatted and diagrammed that it seems a shame to ask you to do a search. But here it is:
Search for Sharing Data between View Controllers
You'll find many good discussions about sharing data between view controllers.
Briefly, though, I can tell you why your code isn't working. In your tableView:didSelectRowAtIndexPath: method, you are creating (alloc/init) a new instance of your VehicleControllerNSObject class each time. Then back in your first view controller on viewDidAppear:, again you are creating (alloc/init) a whole new instance each time.
So you have multiple objects coming and going and they have nothing to do with each other. It's a bit like giving some important information to one person at a bus station and then later randomly picking some other person out and trying to retrieve that same information from her.
So one quick idea would be to create just once instance of your VehicleControllerNSObject (just an aside, that's a bit of a strange name for a class since generally all objective-c objects are descendants of NSObject anyway. I'm just going to call that VehicleController for now)
So let's say you wanted a 'sharedInstance' of VehicleController. You could add a class method to VehicleController to give you a way to easily get that one sharedInstance:
+(VehicleController*)sharedInstance {
static VehicleController *sharedInstance_ = nil;
static dispatch_once_t onceToken;
dispatch_once(&onceToken, ^{
sharedInstance_ = [[VehicleController alloc] init];
});
return sharedInstance_;
}
So to get that instance in methods in other classes you can just do something like :
VehicleController *sharedController = [VehicleController sharedInstance];
sharedController.someProperty = someValue;
// and then back in your first view controller, similarly:
VehicleController *sharedController = [VehicleController sharedInstance];
id someValue = sharedController.someProperty;
Again, check the search, many people have had good discussions on this. This is just one approach. I hope it at least makes sense why your code wasn't working.
Hope that helps.
To answer question 3. No.
I think that the best way to do something like this would be to use Core Data and it's NSManagedObject.
A combination of UITableViewController and NSFetchedResultsController that is feed from a Core Data sqlite backing store, if well set would feed and keep your UITableView updated.
It would be to long to describe all in here. So I will stop there.
If you don't want to go with that there is always the possibility to use a shared pointers to a mutable object or to use a singleton object to communicate information between UIViewController.

Accessing NSDictionary problem

I'm only new to iPhone development, so my apologies if this is a silly question. I'm building various apps based on a book I'm reading and one of their suggestion was to build a mini web browser. I thought this would be easy, but while most of it is, I'm seriously struggling with the NSDictionary.
I have a UISegmentedControl used to display various bookmarks. The bookmark name that is displayed on the buttons of the UISegmentedControl is going to be my key and the url is the value associated with it.
I first try to declare an NSDictonary as a private (global variable), but since I could not get it to work, I resorted to declare it in my header file as follows:
#property (nonatomic, retain) NSDictionary *bookmarks;
I synthesize it and I initialized it in the viewDidLoad as follows:
- (void)viewDidLoad
{
bookmarks = [NSDictionary
dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:#"http://www.microsoft.com",
#"Microsoft",
#"http://www.google.com",
#"Google",
#"http://www.apple.com",
#"Apple",
#"http://msdn.microsoft.com",
#"MSDN", nil];
[super viewDidLoad];
}
I then associated a control with my segmented control and when the event is triggered and the function is called I've got the following code which is called:
- (IBAction) getShortcut:(id)sender
{
NSString *shortcut;
shortcut = [shortcuts titleForSegmentAtIndex:shortcuts.selectedSegmentIndex];
NSString *url = [bookmarks valueForKey:shortcut];
//[self navigateTo: url];
[url release];
}
When a button from the UISegmentedControl is clicked, I extract the value and stored it into shortcut and then I try to use the shortcut variable as a key to extract the associated value from the NSDictionary "bookmarks" but it keeps crashing on NSString *url = [bookmarks valueForKey:shortcut];
and bombs out of my function and displays the usual error EXC_BAD_ACCESS
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
T.
You have two options. one is to deal with the ivar directly as #Matt S. posted. Note that in this case you need to keep you object with enough retain count. You're using and auto released object and causing the error.
The other option is to use the property you already defined:
self.bookmarks = [[NSDictionary ...]];
And the property retains it.
That dictionary is autoreleased.
Try this:
self.bookmarks = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys...]
You didn't retain the NSDictionary.
Do:
bookmarks = [[NSDictionary
dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:#"http://www.microsoft.com",
#"Microsoft", nil] retain];
The problem is, that you do not retain "bookmarks" in the viewDidLoad method. There is an naming convention mentioned somewhere in the Apple docs: If an intialisation method starts with "init..." the returned object is retained, if not you have to do it yourself. The "dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys" returns and object with retain count 0, which means, that after the scope of assignment (your viewDidLoad method) it is immediatly released again.
So just put a
[bookmarks retain];
after your initalisation and you are done. Another solution which does the retaining for you
bookmarks = [[NSDictionary alloc] initWithObjectsAndKeys ...];
And you shouldn't release the url in your action. It gets released, once you release the dictionary

I'm having issues inputing a name if applicable

I have a function here that upon completing a single round, if your score is higher than either a default score entry or a newly placed high score then it will swap its data with your data and push everything else down. removing the last entry from the list. currently this is just one exchange and for functions sake I'm going to hard code it and then refactor it later.
My main problem is that when I set up a text input view to capture the players name execution continues immediately without the players input and crashes the game. I commented out the line that sets the text because I have a default value in place just in case any attempt that I try to make fails. How can I get Execution to wait for a moment while input is taken? Would I have to set up a delegate method? If so I'm still a bit confused by delegates. I could set it up to work but I don't understand it, so I wouldn't be able to do any other special custom tasks with it. I've worked on it for a while and got no further...
-(void)saveData:(ScoreKeep *)stats{
NSMutableDictionary *swap = [[NSMutableDictionary alloc]init];//used for swaping entries
NSString *filePath = [self pathOfFile];
NSLog(#"Writing to %#", filePath);
if ([[NSFileManager defaultManager]fileExistsAtPath:filePath]) {
NSLog(#"Loading previous dictionary to save...");
dataDictionary = [NSMutableDictionary dictionaryWithContentsOfFile:filePath];
if ([dataDictionary objectForKey:#"1"]) {
NSMutableDictionary *highScore = [dataDictionary objectForKey:#"1"];
if ([stats.score intValue] > [[highScore objectForKey:#"SCORE"] intValue]) {
NSLog(#"You Win! score: %# highscore: %#", stats.score,[NSNumber numberWithInt:[[highScore objectForKey:#"SCORE"] intValue]] );
stats = [[ScoreKeep alloc] initWithNibName:#"Scorekeep" bundle:nil];
NSLog(#"Setting up name entry");
[self.view addSubview:stats.view]; //New view is added so that the player can input data(Assume it is complete);
//stats.nameTag = setName.nameTag;//This line is executed before the new view is dismissed causing an error to occur
[stats setupDictionary]; // It just goes down hill from here if the previous line is uncommented
[dataDictionary setObject:stats.sComponents forKey:#"1"];
}else {
NSLog(#"You Lose: %# highscore: %#", stats.score,[NSNumber numberWithInt:[[highScore objectForKey:#"SCORE"] intValue]] );
}
NSLog(#"Got first place entry");
}else {
NSLog(#"Initilizing Score");
}
}else{
NSLog(#"Creating new dictionary to save...");
dataDictionary = [[NSMutableDictionary alloc]init];
}
[dataDictionary writeToFile:filePath atomically:YES];
}
Help would greatly be appreciated. If more information is needed I'd be happy to provide.
by the way ScoreKeep is an object that contains a dictionary and a function to create a dictionary such that it can set any values I need and package them into sComponents(the dictionary to be entered into the main savefile)
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>
#class omphalosUtility;
#pragma mark -
#pragma mark Saving data
#pragma mark -
static inline void poop(){
NSLog(#"POOP");
}
I'm going to try making a utility file that works independently of the app so that I Can update files and perform other universal operations such as saving when needed. Its a step in a direction that i'd like to take.
If i get it right, (The code is really nasty, man...) your problem is that you are trying to present a View Controller with the wrong way.
Correct me if i'm wrong, is ScoreKeep is a ViewController? if so, you have to name it properly. that's for a start.
Second, you cant present another view controller only by adding its "view" property to the current view controller's View Hierarchy. that way the view will not respond properly to the events.
the correct way to to what you'r trying to do is by presenting the ScoreKeep ViewController modally.
there is no other right way to do this without using delegation. you will have to acquire this technique.
Your view controller that responsible for getting the name from the user need to have a way to tell it's master view controller that the user entered a name. and that is achieved through delegation.
What you should do:
Basically you create a protocol called something like "NamePrompterViewControllerDelegate"
that will have at least one method that will be called when the user will done entering his name.
Your ScoreKeepViewController should have an instance variable that implemented the protocol (Look at the apple documentation on protocols for assistance)
Your main view controller (the one that contains the method you added) then should implement the protocol you created, and set itself as the delegate of ScoreKeep like that:
stats = [[ScoreKeep alloc] initWithNibName:#"Scorekeep" bundle:nil];
stats.delegate = self;
For more info on presenting and dismissing ViewControllers modally you should read the documentation at Apple Documentation
I hope i helped you, there is just a lot to cover and it hardly can be done by writing an answer.
Feel free to ask more for clearance.

how to hide some properties using ABPeoplePicker

When using peoplePickerNavigationController:(ABPeoplePickerNavigationController *)peoplePicker shouldContinueAfterSelectingPerson:(ABRecordRef)person, a view with all of the contact's information is shown. I've seen apps which only display selected info only (e.g. phone numbers).
How can I do this? I only want to display the contact's name and phone numbers.
Thank you very much!
It's pretty simple. I customized ABPeoplePickerNavigationController to only show email addresses.
The code looks like this:
ABPeoplePickerNavigationController *peoplePicker = [[ABPeoplePickerNavigationController alloc] init];
[peoplePicker setPeoplePickerDelegate:self];
[peoplePicker setDisplayedProperties:[NSArray arrayWithObject:[NSNumber numberWithInt:kABPersonEmailProperty]]];
You can find a list of the available properties here.
I'm not sure if you can,
You could do this to get a list of people for the address book:
// get the default address book.
ABAddressBookRef addressBook = ABAddressBookCreate();
CFArrayRef allPeople = ABAddressBookCopyArrayOfAllPeople(addressBook);
and then create your own custom picker view, showing only the information you want.
In Swift, you simply do this.
var people = ABPeoplePickerNavigationController()
people.peoplePickerDelegate = self
// 3 is for Phone Number
people.displayedProperties = [3]

Class variable type gets changed

So in my view controller, I run code to populate an NSArray of Customer (custom class) objects. This custom class has objects that are of ANOTHER custom class called Address (a customer has a billing address and a shipping address). In the view controller when a customer in the list is selected, it passes a new view controller a customer object, like so:
- (void)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView didSelectRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath {
InfoViewController *customerinfoViewController = [[InfoViewController alloc] initWithStyle:UITableViewStyleGrouped andCustomer:[[[customers objectAtIndex:indexPath.section] objectAtIndex:indexPath.row] retain]];
[self.navigationController pushViewController:customerinfoViewController animated:YES];
[customerinfoViewController release];
}
The first time I visit this view controller while running the application, it works fine. However, when I revisit the view controller, something interesting happens. The application crashes, with unrecognized selector sent to instance 0x00whatever. Using the mouseover debugging feature in xCode, I am finding that the first object of the customer's shipAddress variable has its type changed from NSString to NSIndexPath. This does not happen to the customer's billAddress object. Anyone have any idea what is going on here? It seems like I may be having memory management issues but I would definitely like a confirmation on this before I tear my code apart tracking down all the retains and releases....
EDIT: More information here. with the following code, I have an NSMutableArray at the class level. At each iteration of the loop, I am looping through nodes in XML (which works fine). Every time a new letter is detected as the first letter of the name, I create a new subarray and add the customer to it, thus filling my class-level NSMutableArray (customers) with subArrays of customers for each letter of the alphabet detected. My question is about the retains and releases of the cycling customer object. Clang Static says there is an over-retaining error on the customer, but when I fix it according to Clang, the loop crashes. what gives? Related code below:
DDXMLDocument *rootDoc = [[[DDXMLDocument alloc] initWithData:xmlData options:0 error:nil] autorelease];
NSArray *elems = [rootDoc nodesForXPath:#"QBXML/QBXMLMsgsRs/CustomerQueryRs/CustomerRet" error:nil];
DDXMLNode *node;
sectionTitles = [[[NSMutableArray alloc] initWithCapacity:1] retain]; // Letters for UITableView section titles
NSMutableArray *subArray;
NSString *lastchar = #"A";
NSString *testchar;
int indexCount = -1;
customers = [[[NSMutableArray alloc] initWithCapacity:[elems count]] retain];
Customer *newCust;
for (int i = 0; i < [elems count]; i++) {
node = [elems objectAtIndex:i];
newCust = [[Customer alloc] initWithCustomerRetNode:node];
testchar = [[newCust fullName] substringToIndex:1];
if (i == 0 || ![[testchar uppercaseString] isEqualToString:lastchar]) {
[sectionTitles addObject:testchar];
lastchar = testchar;
indexCount++;
subArray = [[NSMutableArray alloc] initWithCapacity:1];
[customers addObject:subArray];
[subArray release];
[[customers lastObject] addObject:[newCust retain]];
}
else {
[[customers lastObject] addObject:[newCust retain]];
}
[newCust release];
}
NOTE: this code works for the most part, but clang doesn't like it.
EDIT: Addresses in the Customer class are assigned like so (which now does not work after Clang fixes)
...
else if ([tempname isEqualToString:#"BillAddress"])
billAddress = [billAddress initWithAddressNode:tempnode];
else if ([tempname isEqualToString:#"ShipAddress"])
shipAddress = [shipAddress initWithAddressNode:tempnode];
...
It sounds like you are having a over release issue, so yes memory management, you might be overreleasing that array you are storing your objects in.Cant really tell from the snippet of code though. Youll have to go and look through the code and find the source. Also using Clang Static Analyzer might be of help to you.