Buttons make my multiview iphone app crash! (but single view is okay) - iphone

This is probably some rookie mistake, but I can't figure it out. I've established a button within my app to recall a link in safari. From my method file it looks like this:
Obj C Code:
-(IBAction)linkSafari{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] openURL:[NSURL URLWithString:#"http://en.wikipedia.org/"]];
}
I linked it up in IB and all seems okay.
When I create this same setup as a single view app it works great, but whenever I click it in my multiview app it's an automatic crash. Acts the same way on both my simulator and physical ipod.
Is there an endless list of places I could have screwed up or is there a certain area I should look into?

I don't think the problem is in that particular function,
but on the way you create the views and viewcontrollers

For anyone interested, this was solved thanks to an extra set of eyes. On my tab bar, I'd declared the assigned nibs for every section, but missed a few class associations. That's what messed me up.

Related

How to share a iAd adbanner across view's?

I am making a iPhone app, I am currently using iAd's in my view's. I've read something about apple recommending to share the adbanner's through out the view's. How can i do this because I have read the apple documentation and it was not clear enough and i was confused, please help me, if their are any tutorials please tell me or just answer and point me in the right way. Currently I have a ad for every view controller and it runs nice but it comes with a error: Too many active banners (10). Creation of new banners will be throttled.
Please help, i am using storyboards and the latest Xcode :) thanks
The way I do it is use a Singleton class that creates the adView, this way you only ever get 1 adView. Then in your viewDidAppear methods of all your ViewControllers you simply add the adView to your view.
You can see my code in the accepted answer here although that is for an AdWhirl ad view, it shouldn't be too difficult to change it for an iAd ad view.
This is the perfect case for a singleton. Many have simply made a subclass of ADBannerView, which can then be added to your view in -viewDidLoad (or -viewDidAppear with the proper precautions taken) and removed in -viewDidDisappear for each View Controller.

Return to mainview from webView deployed using storyboard

I created a new project "Single View Application" and designed the mainView with Storyboard. My main view contains a UIButton that opens the camera, the camera scans barcode and automatically goes to a website. Now I created a webView programmatically so that website can open and also created a UIButton inside the webView. Now I want that UIButton to act as home botton and return to mainview. I am unable to do that, please help.
ViewController.m code: http://cl.ly/FKj8
My storyboard looks like:
You really should look into the View Controller Programming Guide -- by switching around the contents of a single view controller, you're making a lot of extra work for yourself with little benefit. By using multiple view controllers when you want to have different "screens" in your app, you can take advantage of storyboarding for easier development, and you automatically get better memory management (read: less potential for crashes), too.
However, to more directly answer your question... if you're putting the WebView into the view hierarchy with [self.view addSubview:webView], you can remove it with [webView removeFromSuperview]. (This means you'll have to keep a reference to the WebView around so you can refer to it when you want to dismiss it.)
I also noticed in the code you posted to cl.ly an unrelated method -deviceModel which uses uname() to get device information. This is a bad idea, for two reasons:
uname() isn't guaranteed to do something useful on an iOS device (even if it currently does). Use the UIDevice class instead if you need this kind of info, or...
Generally, you don't want to test for the device name to enable functionality in your app; instead, you should test for the capabilities you need. (For example, if you look for a device name starting with "iPhone 4" to test for a Retina display, you'll miss the 4th-generation iPod touch, and the iPhone-5-or-whatever-they-call-what's-next. Instead, use the UIScreen class.)

How to get/set the rootViewController?

Now,I gonna Develop an App ,which wants to switch from many different Views irregularly,also the views need to load large resources,AKA,it's hard to manage memory.Are there any good solustion?
PS:I created a ViewController as RootViewController,and When a button was Touch,run the code as
"ViewController=newController"
.The problem came,The new View loaded wrong way,it rotate so that couldn't show in a correct way.
I google for the solution,some one said ,I should replace the rootViewController,just like that,
[UIApplication sharedApplication].delegate.window.rootViewController=newController;
But I can't get/set the rootViewController in other class though it's a singleton.
Why not having a class that handles all the view switches ?
This article describes an architecture that might be helpfull: http://www.mikeziray.com/2010/01/27/handling-your-initial-view-controllers-for-iphone/comment-page-1/#comment-607

UITabBarController, UINavigationController and autorotate

i have problem with autorotate on iphone
i set up in all classes
- (BOOL)shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation:(UIInterfaceOrientation)interfaceOrientation {
return (interfaceOrientation != UIInterfaceOrientationPortraitUpsideDown);
}
but it is not respond ;/
Sample code is: http://b6.s3.p.quickshareit.com/files/testautorotatecb367.zip
problem is only with first tab, if i switch application to second tab, and rotate iphone, interface is rotating. it is not rotating in TAB1, where i put custom UINavigationController
OK
problem is that i do not init navigation views, i use only alloc, after i add alloc] init] all started works OK
Okay, i think i see what the problem is in you code. You need to add your UINavigationBar to the delegate like you did with the tab bar, otherwise it doesn't know of its existence and therefore it isn't rotating because it is confused on what is in the view.
Because I use Interface Builder to take care of all my GUI needs, i'm not sure how to do this manually in code, so, to help you out, here >> http://www.radford.edu/ebalci/Tutorials/SimpleTabNavTemplate.zip is a tutorial kind of thing i made a few days ago for a friend, you can use it as sort of a template or guide to help you out (i hope it will help you)
[my tutorial uses UItableViews for navigation but that is optional]
also, i commented out my rotation methods because i wasn't worried about it at the time, but
if you uncomment them (and i think you have to add the method to one of the classes because i deleted it) it will rotate, i just checked, but was too lazy to re zip it and upload it.
I just want you to know that I pretty much just made this thing a day ago, there is a rich text file in the zip that has instructions, but, it is a rough draft, i haven't really revised it yet so, i hope you can read through it with ease despite the fact it is a rough draft.
Let me know if it helps =) Good Luck
And your custom UINavigationController also has the same
shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation
method that returns YES to landscape views?

UIViewController not responding to touches

Hey all, I'm completely stumped with this iPhone problem.
This is my first time building a view programmatically, without a nib. I can get the view displaying things just fine, but the darn ViewController isn't responding to touches the way it used to in programs where I used a nib. I should add that in the past, I started with the View-Based Application template, and this time I used the Window-Based Application template.
My thinking is that the View-Based template does something magical to let the iPhone know where to send the touch events, but I can't figure out what that would be even after several hours of bumbling around Google. Or I could be looking in an entirely wrong place and my troubles are related to something else entirely. Any thoughts?
There's nothing magical in the view-based template. The most likely reasons for failure to respond to touches are:
You've messed with touchesBegan:withEvent:, userInteractionEnabled, exclusiveTouch or something else, thinking you need to mess with these (generally you don't; the defaults are generally correct)
You created a second UIWindow
You put something over the view (even if it's transparent)
Simplify your code down to just creating a view programatically that responds to a touch and nothing else. It should be just a few lines of code. If you can't get that working, post the code and we'll look at what's going on.
Problem solved. touchesEnded != touchedEnded.
That'll teach me to program without my glasses on.
Another possible scenario for failure in response to touches is when your VC frame is not predefined and its boundaries are actually exceeding the window placeholder. It happens a lot when you just forget to define the frame property for the VC.
Once you define it correctly - User interaction returns to normal.
Good luck !