Mimic iPod application UI - iphone

I am looking for the best approach to mimic the iPod application on the iPhone/iPod Touch. Specifically, I want to mimic what happens when the iPod player (when a track is actually played) shows up. The iPod application starts as a tabBarController with every tab holding a navigationController. However, when a track is played, the entire tabBarController is replaced by a new viewController.
What is the best approach for this kind of UI? At first, I thought the tabBarController needed to be added to a separate navigationController, but this resulted in two navigation bars (one on top of the other).
Any advice is welcome. Cheers.

Use the hidesBottomBarWhenPushed property. Your controller will stay within your existing navigation-controller hierarchy (unlike fluchtpunkt's solution), and the tab bar will automatically hide and show itself when your player controller appears and disappears.

you want to present the new viewcontroller as a modal vc.
- (void)presentModalViewController:(UIViewController *)modalViewController animated:(BOOL)animated

Related

iOS Storyboard Modal Segues and Memory

My apps "short" description:
Basically an interactive storybook, I have a class that sets up a audio session and audio player which every other class(ViewControllers) in my app imports and calls a function or two to set the right sound to be played each time something happens(for instance.. user reads the story). Each ViewController has it's own .m and .h classes and uses them for animations and action handling. My app is only about 60 mb's in size (audio/images/code).
Now these ViewControllers are set up in a storyboard (they are 13 now) and are modal segued from one to the next one and then programmatically dismissed to go back.
When I run my app on my iPad now, I'm starting to get memory warnings and yes Instruments is showing me that my app is adding roughly about 40 Mb's for every ViewController that I segue to.
My questions are:
Do they reside in real memory no matter what I do? (I thought I wasn't holding any strong pointers to these view controllers).
Is there an easy way for me to dismiss one controller and still use a modal segue to get to the next one?(ran into troubles trying this)
Modal Segues are probably not the way I should be doing things in my App are they?!. They looked so nice and easy for my "storybook", but now they are giving me a very rough time.
Any other tips you can give me from what I described are appreciated.
Thank you.
Yes, as long as you present it modally. The presenter view controller keeps a strong pointer to the presented view controller. What you could do here is in the viewWillDisappear: release all the images and other views that might use memory !
You could instantiate your view controller using the method instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier: and then presentViewController:animated:completion: like you would do with any view controller
It's up to you to decide. But you could easily mimic the animation if you wanted to.
If I understood everything correctly I would go with a singleton class kinda like 'AudioEngine' which is accessible from anywhere in any class. Then I would design all my viewcontrollers in my storyboard like you did. When I need to present modally another view controller, I'll do it using the answer of your 2nd question. If I still had a memory issue, I would try to cheat and keeps always 3 view controllers (like we do with the UIScrollView's infinite scroll) that I would reuse and I'll mimic the modal presentation using UIView's animation blocks.

Best practices for landscape only apps?

I'm a new iOS programming and I'm developing a simple iPhone game that needs to run in landscape only. I've ...
set supported orientations in the target settings
added the req. plist item (initial interface orientation)
overridden shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation to return YES only for landscape modes
.. and the app "looks" correct, but there are a few odd things going on.
Issue 1 - I'm trying to manually position my views and not rely on autolayout. I've got a UIView in a NIB that I'm loading that needs to be positioned 150px from the right edge of the screen. I have to get the UIViewController's view's height (not width) to correctly position it - like it's not rotated to landscape at this point in the code.
Issue 2 - Implementing a UINavigationController to go from the title screen to the game interaction. When I'm pushing the interaction UIViewController to the stack, it slides in from the right like it's supposed to. When I go back to the title by popping the interaction, it slides UP to the title. It's seems like it's rotating back to portrait?
I think there is something very basic that I'm missing, but I can't find it in my app code. I've gone over the lists for a landscape app but they don't mention more than the list above.
Are there any other things/settings/methods to override that I should be on the look out for?
You need to set shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation in your other viewControllers as well. Especially the ones displayed inside your UINavigationController.
Issue 2:
Don't use many UIViewController's. Use one view controller. Create one main UIViewController and for other UIViewController's just do:
[mainviewcontrl presentModalViewcontroller: child_viewcontrl animated: YES];
For delete a child view controller, use
[child_viewcontrl dismissModalViewControllerAnimated: YES];

How to design multiple views in iPhone

I am making code for iPhone. My first screen has only one button with text Menu. When user will click on this button next screen is coming with multiple navigation bar.Each Navigation bar has their own Text information which are being selected after clicking on any Navigation bar.
How i should to design it for iPhone ? Please give me concept. Should i take multiple views ? If i have multiple views how will i hide and show on button click event ?
Thanks in advance.
You will have to adapt your user interface to comply to how Apple wants an app to work, look, and feel - or make your own custom viewcontrollers. Even then, you might not get the exact behavior you want.
My hottest tip is to look at similar apps on appstore and see how they are navigated.
I don't get a picture in my mind from your description, but it seems you want what is called "drill down". This is best done with tableViews.
You can't have multiple navigation controllers on the same "screen"; it doesn't work like that on the iPhone. Instead, what you have is one single Navigation controller, that controls the pushing of views. You decide which sub-view to push depending on which selection the user makes, and the Navigation controller handles the rest of the interaction with the user to let him or her navigate between the views.
Example structure:
Window-based app
+-MainWindow.xib
| +-First view with button
| +-UINavigationController
+-tableview1.xib
+-tableview2.xib
+-any more views you need.
Make the app delegate a <UINavigationControllerDelegate> and declare navCt *UINavigationController, and connect it in Interface Builder. You can then write a pushVC method, which takes as argument a UIViewController *vc. It does a [navCt pushViewController:vc animated:YES];
Connect the button to an IBAction, which then calls the method in the app delegate, [PushVC myVC], where myVC refers to any viewcontroller in your app, in this case table view 1.
In this table, on didSelectRow... event you can use the same method to push the sub-view table view 2.
I think this is minimum code if you are unsure about iPhone app design. Either way, I hope it gives some ideas.
You should read about UINavigationController, UITabBarController, UIViewController.
http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/uikit/reference/UIViewController_Class/Reference/Reference.html
You almost always make one view pr. viewcontroller.

iphone - TabBarController rotation question

My app has 4 tabs. All the view controllers support rotation, and indeed are rotated when I rotate the device. For one of the view controllers, I need to reposition some of the subviews upon rotation. I do this in willRotateToInterfaceOrientation of that view controller, and it works fine.
The problem comes when I switch to a different tab, then rotate the device, then go back to the original tab. It apparently has not received the rotation notification, since willRotateToInterfaceOrientation has not been called. So it seems as though only the "active" view controller gets notified that the device has rotated.
The question: how do you get all the view controllers (controlled by a TabBarController) to rotate?
Unfortunately this is a bug in iOS 3.x. It works fine in iOS 4.x. I've seen apps that manually keep track of orientation changes and then do the rotation manually for inactive viewcontrollers. Sucks.
Looking through the iOS 3.2 docs to make sure this works, there is a viewControllers property in UITabBarController. Try something like this:
for (UIViewController * viewController in tabBarController) {
// Do stuff here with each 'viewController'.
}
I recommend that you do something with the UIViewController's -shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation: method but you may have another way in which you plan on achieving the rotation.
You should also check for the interface orientation in viewWillAppear method of the controller whose subviews frame you are changing.Because when you move to the new tab and rotate the device and now when you tap another tab the viewWillAppear method will we called and there you can change the frames accordingly.
I also faced the same problem which i sorted out using this approach

UISplitViewController and complex view hierarchy

I'm doing an iPad tech demo and I'm running into a serious technical problem.
I have an app concept that leverages UISplitViewController, but NOT as the primary controller for the entire app.
The app flow could be described roughly as this:
Home screen (UIViewController)
List->Detail "Catalog" (UISplitViewController)
Super Detail Screen (UIViewController but could conceivable also be a child of SplitView).
The problem is in the flow between Home and Catalog. Once a UISplitViewController view is added to the UIWindow, it starts to throw hissy fits.
The problem can be summarized at this:
When a UISplitView generates a popover view, it appears to then be latched to its parent view. Upon removing the UISplitView from the UIWindow subviews, you will get a CoreGraphics exception and the view will fail to be removed.
When adding other views (presumably in this case, the home screen to which you are returning), they do not autorotate, instead, the UISplitView, which has failed to be removed due to a CG exception, continues to respond to the rotation instead, causing horrible rendering bugs that can't be just "dealt with". At this point, adding any views, even re-adding the SplitView, causes a cascade of render bugs.
I then tried simply to leave the SplitView ever present as the "bottom" view, and keeping adding and removing the Home Screen from on top of it, but this fails as SplitView dominates the Orientation change calls, and Home Screen will not rotate, even if you call [homeScreen becomeFirstResponder]
You can't put SplitView into a hierarchy like UINavigationController, you will get an outright runtime error, so that option is off the table. Modals just look bad and are discourages anyway.
My presumption at this moment is that the only proper way to deal with this problem is so somehow "disarm" UISplitViewController so that it can be removed from its parent view without throwing an unhandled exception, but I have no idea how.
If you want to see an app that does exactly what I need to do, check out GILT Groupe in the iPad app store. They pulled it off, but they seem to have programmed an entire custom view transition set.
Help would be greatly appreciated.
Apple states:
The split view controller’s view
should always be installed as the root
view of your application window. You
should never present a split view
inside of a navigation or tab bar
interface.
This does mean it should be root view and not subview of another view. Even though they add:
You should never present a split view inside of a navigation or tab bar interface
That does not mean you can add it as a subview of any other controller either. (sorry)
I have a feeling that what you are experiencing is the byproduct of trying to do so. I am actually surprised that GILT Groupe's app did not get rejected. Apple has a tendency to enforce these HIG guidelines rather strictly lately. They (as you found out already) cause a rather nasty runtime error when you attempt to add them to a NavigationController.
I've solved this for myself... actually worked around... by presenting all other possible full screen views as modals of the SplitView...
This is an unsavory way of doing things in my book, but Apple leaves you little choice if you want to leverage a SplitView only "sometimes" within an app.
I had some success by creating a second UIWindow. I associate the UISplitViewController with that, and switch it out with the main window when I want to show the splitview. It seems to work they way I wanted, except for a slight delay in rotations and a log message about "wait_fences".
Unless your developing for jail-broken devices then bending apples rules/wishes isn't a good idea. Like Jann and Jasconius state above this means keeping a splitView controller view root, not over-using modals (vague) and not using multiple windows.
Also, the Gilt app is only available in the US
I'v been trying to find a solution too and have ended up programatically removing views from the window like Tuannd talks about but the landscape rendering bug is unforgivable.
#Jasconius, What is the max number of modals are you are presenting at any time?
I am struggling with this same issue. I've been trying various things poking at the UISplitViewController as a black box and see how it reacts.
I seem to have come up with a solution to my case which seems to be working satisfactorily.
The key appears to be that the first view added to the UIWindow is the only view properly initialized. All the problems I've had tend to stem from incorrect notification of the orientation of the device. The first view added, apparently has this correctly configured.
In my case I didn't want the UISplitView as the first view. The following is working for me.
The app delegate application:didFinishLaunching method is special. Adding the view to the UIWindow must occur here. If it is done elsewhere it does not get configured properly.
Essentially the magic sauce, is have the split view be the first view added to the window. Its then ok to remove it as long as you retain the UISplitViewController. From then on you can swap other views in and out, including the UISplitView and most things seem to be ok.
I've still run into a few issues. Popovers on views other than the split view are confused on the views frames and location of toolbar buttons and will display in the wrong location. I place then in a specific location and that seems to handle that case.
If a popover on the split view is still displayed, and you try to view another view, the orientation of the second view is confused and shows up sideways. If that view is accessed before the popup is displayed, all is well. I've fixed this my manually dismissing the popover before switching to any other view.
Here's the code if it helps. All the controllers are instance variables of appDelegate
- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions {
// This also seems to work as good magic. Seems to set orientation and size properties that persist.
[window addSubview:splitViewController.view];
[splitViewController.view removeFromSuperview];
[self switchToNewViewController:firstController];
[window makeKeyAndVisible];
return TRUE;
}
- (void)switchToNewViewController:(UIViewController *)newViewController {
[popoverController dismissPopoverAnimated:FALSE];
if (newViewController != currentViewController) {
[currentViewController removeFromSuperview];
currentViewController = newViewController;
[window addSubView:newViewController.view];
}
}
Just wanted to say that I was running into these same issues, found this forum topic, and followed the advice from g051051 above. This is working perfectly for me. I am not seeing any glitch, and no messages about wait_fences in the console of the device.
I simply used IB to create two UIWindow objects in the main XIB, created as normal the UISplitViewController and then also an instance of my other controller derived from UIViewController (which I am using for full screen display). I have simply hooked them up by attaching the rootViewController for each UIWindow to its appropriate controller.
In application:didLaunch...: method I can decide which window to send the makeKeyAndVisible method and which to set to hidden. When the user want to switch back and forth I simply have to send makeKeyAndVisible to one and set the hidden property on the other, that's all there is to it.
As indicated all of the rotation related messages are sent to each controller appropriately, regardless of which one is associated with the currently visible window.
Anyway, works great for me, and actually quite easy to set up.