I am using embeded youtube in my webview for making a iPhone app. But I have couple of issues. First is, When I start playing video, it automatically goes to full screen. I want it to remain on the same frame while playing. Another issue is, I want it to run automatically. I mean I dont want to manually click run, I want, as soon as the app gets loaded, it should RUN AUTOMATICALLY without manually running, plus it should not run on FULLSCREEN.
Thanks
Akansha
I think you are loading embeded html string for youtube but it's not going to play automatically.
for that you need to put logic like bellow code
- (UIButton *)findButtonInView:(UIView *)view
{
UIButton *button = nil;
if ([view isMemberOfClass:[UIButton class]]) {
return (UIButton *)view;
}
if (view.subviews && [view.subviews count] > 0) {
for (UIView *subview in view.subviews) {
button = [self findButtonInView:subview];
if (button) return button;
}
}
return button;
}
- (void)webViewDidFinishLoad:(UIWebView *)theWebView
{
self.playButton = [self findButtonInView:theWebView];
[self.playButton sendActionsForControlEvents:UIControlEventTouchUpInside];
}
This will play video automatically as loading finished...
So I have an app that needs to load a different image as the background image depending on the orientation of the device. I have the following code in viewDidLoad:
BOOL isLandScape = UIDeviceOrientationIsLandscape(self.interfaceOrientation);
if (isLandScape)
{
self.bgImage.image = [UIImage imageNamed:#"login_bg748.png"];
}
For some reason even if the simulator starts in landscape this bool is still false. I checked and it always reports being in portrait mode regardless of the actual simulator orientation. Does anyone have an idea as to why this is not working?
In shouldAutoRotateForInterfaceOrientation I have the following:
if (UIDeviceOrientationIsLandscape(interfaceOrientation))
{
self.bgImage.image = [UIImage imageNamed:#"login_bg748.png"];
} else
{
self.bgImage.image = [UIImage imageNamed:#"login_bg1004.png"];
}
return YES;
And this code does work, its just the startup that is messed up. After I perform one rotation it works fine.
The reason is that viewDidLoad is too early. Every app launches in portrait and later rotates to landscape. When viewDidLoad is called, the rotation has not happened yet. You want to use delayed performance, or put your tests in didRotateFromInterfaceOrientation or similar. See the explanation in my book:
http://www.apeth.com/iOSBook/ch19.html#_rotation
First in the functionshouldAutoRotateForInterfaceOrientation you just have to return YES
now use this function
-(void)didRotateFromInterfaceOrientation:(UIInterfaceOrientation)fromInterfaceOrientation
{
if (UIInterfaceOrientationIsLandscape(self.interfaceOrientation))
{
//landscape view login
}
else
{
//portrait View logic
}
}
And if you are already in landscape view or portrait view then in your viewDidLoad function
-(void)viewDidLoad
{
if (UIInterfaceOrientationIsLandscape(self.interfaceOrientation))
{
//landscape view code
}
else
{
//portrait view code
}
}
hope this will help
I want to get a pointer reference to UIKeyboard *keyboard to the keyboard on screen so that I can add a transparent subview to it, covering it completely, to achieve the effect of disabling the UIKeyboard without hiding it.
In doing this, can I assume that there's only one UIKeyboard on the screen at a time? I.e., is it a singleton? Where's the method [UIKeyboard sharedInstance]. Brownie points if you implement that method via a category. Or, even more brownie points if you convince me why it's a bad idea to assume only one keyboard and give me a better solution.
Try this:
// my func
- (void) findKeyboard {
// Locate non-UIWindow.
UIWindow *keyboardWindow = nil;
for (UIWindow *testWindow in [[UIApplication sharedApplication] windows]) {
if (![[testWindow class] isEqual:[UIWindow class]]) {
keyboardWindow = testWindow;
break;
}
}
// Locate UIKeyboard.
UIView *foundKeyboard = nil;
for (UIView *possibleKeyboard in [keyboardWindow subviews]) {
// iOS 4 sticks the UIKeyboard inside a UIPeripheralHostView.
if ([[possibleKeyboard description] hasPrefix:#"<UIPeripheralHostView"]) {
possibleKeyboard = [[possibleKeyboard subviews] objectAtIndex:0];
}
if ([[possibleKeyboard description] hasPrefix:#"<UIKeyboard"]) {
foundKeyboard = possibleKeyboard;
break;
}
}
}
How about using -[UIApplication beginIgnoringInteractionEvents]?
Also, another trick to get the view containing the keyboard is to initialize a dummy view with CGRectZero and set it as the inputAccessoryView of your UITextField or UITextView. Then, get its superview. Still, such shenanigans is private/undocumented, but I've heard of apps doing that and getting accepted anyhow. I mean, how else would Instagram be able to make their comment keyboard interactive (dismiss on swipe) like the Messages keyboard?
I found that developerdoug's answer wasn't working on iOS 7, but by modifying things slightly I managed to get access to what I needed. Here's the code I used:
-(UIView*)findKeyboard
{
UIView *keyboard = nil;
for (UIWindow* window in [UIApplication sharedApplication].windows)
{
for (UIView *possibleKeyboard in window.subviews)
{
if ([[possibleKeyboard description] hasPrefix:#"<UIPeripheralHostView"])
{
keyboard = possibleKeyboard;
break;
}
}
}
return keyboard;
}
From what I could make out, in iOS 7 the keyboard is composed of a UIPeripheralHostView containing two subviews: a UIKBInputBackdropView (which provides the blur effect on whatever's underneath the keyboard) and a UIKeyboardAutomatic (which provides the character keys). Manipulating the UIPeripheralHostView seems to be equivalent to manipulating the entire keyboard.
Discaimer: I have no idea whether Apple will accept an app that uses this technique, nor whether it will still work in future SDKs.
Be aware, Apple has made it clear that applications which modify private view hierarchies without explicit approval beforehand will be rejected. Take a look in the Apple Developer Forums for various developers' experience on the issue.
If you're just trying to disable the keyboard (prevent it from receiving touches), you might try adding a transparent UIView that is the full size of the screen for the current orientation. If you add it as a subview of the main window, it might work. Apple hasn't made any public method of disabling the keyboard that I'm aware of - you might want to use one of your support incidents with Apple, maybe they will let you in on the solution.
For an app I am currently developing I am using a really quick and easy method:
Add this in the header file:
// Add in interface
UIWindow * _window;
// Add as property
#property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet UIView * _keyboard;
Then add this code in the bottom of the keyboardWillShow function:
-(void) keyboardWillShow: (NSNotification *) notification {
.... // other keyboard will show code //
_window = [UIApplication sharedApplication].windows.lastObject;
[NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:0.05
target:self
selector:#selector(allocateKeyboard)
userInfo:nil
repeats:NO];
}
This code look for when the keyboard is raised and then allocates the current window. I have then added a timer to allocate the keyboard as there were some issues when allocated immediately.
- (void)allocateKeyboard {
if (!_keyboard) {
if (_window.subviews.count) {
// The keyboard is always the 0th subview
_keyboard = _window.subviews[0];
}
}
}
We now have the keyboard allocated which gives you direct "access" to the keyboard as the question asks.
Hope this helps
Under iOS 8 it appears you have to jump down the chain more than in the past. The following works for me to get the keyboard, although with custom keyboards available and such I wouldn't rely on this working unless you're running in a controlled environment.
- (UIView *)findKeyboard {
for (UIWindow* window in [UIApplication sharedApplication].windows) {
UIView *inputSetContainer = [self viewWithPrefix:#"<UIInputSetContainerView" inView:window];
if (inputSetContainer) {
UIView *inputSetHost = [self viewWithPrefix:#"<UIInputSetHostView" inView:inputSetContainer];
if (inputSetHost) {
UIView *kbinputbackdrop = [self viewWithPrefix:#"<_UIKBCompatInput" inView:inputSetHost];
if (kbinputbackdrop) {
UIView *theKeyboard = [self viewWithPrefix:#"<UIKeyboard" inView:kbinputbackdrop];
return theKeyboard;
}
}
}
}
return nil;
}
- (UIView *)viewWithPrefix:(NSString *)prefix inView:(UIView *)view {
for (UIView *subview in view.subviews) {
if ([[subview description] hasPrefix:prefix]) {
return subview;
}
}
return nil;
}
My app has several buttons which trigger different events. The user should NOT be able to hold down several buttons. Anyhow, holding down several buttons crashes the app.
And so, I'm trying to disable multi-touch in my app.
I've unchecked 'Multiple Touch' in all the xib files, and as far as I can work out, the properties 'multipleTouchEnabled' and 'exclusiveTouch' control whether the view uses multitouch. So in my applicationDidFinishLaunching I've put this:
self.mainViewController.view.multipleTouchEnabled = NO;
self.mainViewController.view.exclusiveTouch = YES;
And in each of my view controllers I've put this in the viewDidLoad
self.view.multipleTouchEnabled = NO;
self.view.exclusiveTouch = YES;
However, it still accepts multiple touches. I could do something like disable other buttons after getting a touch down event, but this would be an ugly hack. Surely there is a way to properly disable multi-touch?
If you want only one button to respond to touches at a time, you need to set exclusiveTouch for that button, rather than for the parent view. Alternatively, you could disable the other buttons when a button gets the "Touch Down" event.
Here's an example of the latter, which worked better in my testing. Setting exclusiveTouch for the buttons kind-of worked, but led to some interesting problems when you moved your finger off the edge of a button, rather than just clicking it.
You need to have outlets in your controller hooked up to each button, and have the "Touch Down", "Touch Up Inside", and "Touch Up Outside" events hooked to the proper methods in your controller.
#import "multibuttonsViewController.h"
#implementation multibuttonsViewController
// hook this up to "Touch Down" for each button
- (IBAction) pressed: (id) sender
{
if (sender == one)
{
two.enabled = false;
three.enabled = false;
[label setText: #"One"]; // or whatever you want to do
}
else if (sender == two)
{
one.enabled = false;
three.enabled = false;
[label setText: #"Two"]; // or whatever you want to do
}
else
{
one.enabled = false;
two.enabled = false;
[label setText: #"Three"]; // or whatever you want to do
}
}
// hook this up to "Touch Up Inside" and "Touch Up Outside"
- (IBAction) released: (id) sender
{
one.enabled = true;
two.enabled = true;
three.enabled = true;
}
#end
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
for(UIView* v in self.view.subviews)
{
if([v isKindOfClass:[UIButton class]])
{
UIButton* btn = (UIButton*)v;
[btn setExclusiveTouch:YES];
}
}
}
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
for(UIView* v in self.view.subviews)
{
if([v isKindOfClass:[UIButton class]])
{
UIButton* btn = (UIButton*)v;
[btn setExclusiveTouch:YES];
}
}
}
This code is tested and working perfectly for me.there is no app crash when pressing more than one button at a time.
Your app crashes for a reason. Investigate further, use the debugger, see what's wrong instead of trying to hide the bug.
Edit:
OK, ok, I have to admit I was a bit harsh. You have to set the exclusiveTouch property on each button. That's all. The multipleTouchEnabled property is irrelevant.
To disable multitouch in SWIFT:
You need first to have an outlet of every button and afterwards just set the exclusive touch to true.Therefore in you viewDidLoad() would have:
yourButton.exclusiveTouch = true.
// not really necessary but you could also add:
self.view.multipleTouchEnabled = false
If you want to disable multi touch throughout the application and don't want to write code for each button then you can simply use Appearance of button. Write below line in didFinishLaunchingWithOptions.
UIButton.appearance().isExclusiveTouch = true
Thats great!! UIAppearance
You can even use it for any of UIView class so if you want to disable multi touch for few buttons. Make a CustomClass of button and then
CustomButton.appearance().isExclusiveTouch = true
There is one more advantage which can help you. In case you want to disable multi touch of buttons in a particular ViewController
UIButton.appearance(whenContainedInInstancesOf: [ViewController2.self]).isExclusiveTouch = true
Based on neoevoke's answer, only improving it a bit so that it also checks subviews' children, I created this function and added it to my utils file:
// Set exclusive touch to all children
+ (void)setExclusiveTouchToChildrenOf:(NSArray *)subviews
{
for (UIView *v in subviews) {
[self setExclusiveTouchToChildrenOf:v.subviews];
if ([v isKindOfClass:[UIButton class]]) {
UIButton *btn = (UIButton *)v;
[btn setExclusiveTouch:YES];
}
}
}
Then, a simple call to:
[Utils setExclusiveTouchToChildrenOf:self.view.subviews];
... will do the trick.
This is quite often issue being reported by our testers. One of the approach that I'm using sometimes, although it should be used consciously, is to create category for UIView, like this one:
#implementation UIView (ExclusiveTouch)
- (BOOL)isExclusiveTouch
{
return YES;
}
Pretty much simple you can use make use of ExclusiveTouch property in this case
[youBtn setExclusiveTouch:YES];
This is a Boolean value that indicates whether the receiver handles touch events exclusively.
Setting this property to YES causes the receiver to block the delivery of touch events to other views in the same window. The default value of this property is NO.
For disabling global multitouch in Xamarin.iOS
Copy&Paste the code below:
[DllImport(ObjCRuntime.Constants.ObjectiveCLibrary, EntryPoint = "objc_msgSend")]
internal extern static IntPtr IntPtr_objc_msgSend(IntPtr receiver, IntPtr selector, bool isExclusiveTouch);
static void SetExclusiveTouch(bool isExclusiveTouch)
{
var selector = new ObjCRuntime.Selector("setExclusiveTouch:");
IntPtr_objc_msgSend(UIView.Appearance.Handle, selector.Handle, isExclusiveTouch);
}
And set it on AppDelegate:
public override bool FinishedLaunching(UIApplication app, NSDictionary options)
{
...
SetExclusiveTouch(true); // setting exlusive to true disables the multitouch
...
}
My experience is that, by default, a new project doesn't even allow multitouch, you have to turn it on. But I suppose that depends on how you got started. Did you use a mutlitouch example as a template?
First of all, are you absolutely sure multitouch is on? It's possible to generate single touches in sequence pretty quickly. Multitouch is more about what you do with two or more fingers once they are on the surface. Perhaps you have single touch on but aren't correctly dealing with what happens if two buttons are pressed at nearly the same time.
I've just had exactly this problem.
The solution we came up with was simply to inherit a new class from UIButton that overrides the initWithCoder method, and use that where we needed one button push at a time (ie. everywhere):
#implementation ExclusiveButton
(id)initWithCoder: (NSCoder*)decoder
{
[self setExclusiveTouch:YES];
return [super initWithCoder:decoder]
}
#end
Note that this only works with buttons loaded from nib files.
I created UIView Class Extension and added this two functions. and when i want to disable view touch i just call [view makeExclusiveTouch];
- (void) makeExclusiveTouchForViews:(NSArray*)views {
for (UIView * view in views) {
[view makeExclusiveTouch];
}
}
- (void) makeExclusiveTouch {
self.multipleTouchEnabled = NO;
self.exclusiveTouch = YES;
[self makeExclusiveTouchForViews:self.subviews];
}
If you want to disable multitouch programmatically, or if you are using cocos2d (no multipleTouchEnabled option), you can use the following code on your ccTouches delegate:
- (BOOL)ccTouchesBegan:(NSSet *)touches
withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
NSSet *multiTouch = [event allTouches];
if( [multiTouch count] > 1) {
return;
}
else {
//else your rest of the code
}
Disable all the buttons on view in "Touch Down" event and enable them in "Touch Up Inside" event.
for example
- (void) handleTouchDown {
for (UIButton *btn in views) {
btn.enable = NO;
}
}
- (void) handleTouchUpInside {
for (UIButton *btn in views) {
btn.enable = Yes;
}
------
------
}
I decided this problem by this way:
NSTimeInterval intervalButtonPressed;
- (IBAction)buttonPicturePressed:(id)sender{
if (([[NSDate date] timeIntervalSince1970] - intervalButtonPressed) > 0.1f) {
intervalButtonPressed = [[NSDate date] timeIntervalSince1970];
//your code for button
}
}
I had struggled with some odd cases when dragging objects around a view, where if you touched another object at the same time it would fire the touchesBegan method. My work-around was to disable user interaction for the parent view until touchesEnded or touchesCancelled is called.
override func touchesMoved(touches: Set<UITouch>, withEvent event: UIEvent?) {
// whatever setup you need
self.view.userInteractionEnabled = false
}
override func touchesEnded(touches: Set<UITouch>, withEvent event: UIEvent?) {
// whatever setup you need
self.view.userInteractionEnabled = true
}
override func touchesCancelled(touches: Set<UITouch>?, withEvent event: UIEvent?) {
// whatever setup you need
self.view.userInteractionEnabled = true
}
A Gotcha:
If you are using isExclusiveTouch, be aware that overriding point(inside:) on the button can interfere, effectively making isExclusiveTouch useless.
(Sometimes you need to override point(inside:) for handling the "button not responsive at bottom of iPhone screen" bug/misfeature (which is caused by Apple installing swipe GestureRecognizers at the bottom of the screen, interfering with button highlighting.)
See: UIButton fails to properly register touch in bottom region of iPhone screen
Just set all relevant UIView's property exclusiveTouch to false do the trick.
I'm trying to display an image while a sound is playing. I can get it to appear, but I'm having trouble making it disappear once the sound has finished playing.
My code:
-(IBAction)guitarChord:(id)sender
{
if (theAudio.playing == YES) {
theAudio.stop;
theAnimation.stop;
} else {
theAudio.play;
theAnimation.play;
}
}
I'm using AVAudioPlayer.
Any ideas what I am doing wrong?
How do I detect a sound has stopped?
Briefly, you need to take a look at AVAudioPlayerDelegate and audioPlayerDidFinishPlaying.