I have an app that has four tabbar controllers views in it. When the app starts up, all four are loaded via SQL select statements. How do I tell it not to load these controllers at startup, but to do it when I select a value from the first screen?
thx
wes
I'm assuming you have 4 ViewController placed into a single TabBarController. If this is the case, why do you want to defer loading? The actual views (usually the 'heavy' part of the ViewController) are not loaded until you actually select one in the tab bar to bring it forward (which is, I think, the behavior you're looking for).
The whole point of the UIViewController class (well, one of the points, anyway) is to allow you to place your view in a hierarchy without having to create all the UI elements required until it's actually time to show it. This makes app organizations much easier.
make simple UIViewController in tabbar, but when tab is selected make loading
Related
Hy everybody
I am a newbie ios programmer and I'm facing many doubts when I must switch the pages of my app.
With the term "page" I mean a UIView that fills the whole screen with some widgets (buttons, textboxes. tables..)
As far as I have understood what I've read I should use an UIViewController to manage each of these pages
since each page should be a screen’s worth of content.
My App starts with a ViewScroller with many buttons and when the user clicks one of these it opens a new page.
The first page is the UIView connected to the RootController Of the Window.
So far to open the new pages I add a child controller to the RootController and it's view as a child of the view of the RootController:
RicLocaliController = [[RicercaLocaliViewController alloc] initWithNibName:#"RicercaLocaliViewController" bundle:nil];
[self addChildViewController:RicLocaliController];
[RicLocaliController didMoveToParentViewController:self];
[self.view addSubview:RicLocaliController.view];
RicLocaliController.view.frame = self.view.bounds;
When the user clicks the "Back" Button I remove the child controller and the child view.
Going down this road I would get a dynamic tree of Controllers with their Views.
So far I have not encountered problems and my app can go up to a third level in the tree and come back. Each page behaves correctly when orientation changes.
But I'm afraid that adding, for each subpage, a child controller and a child view could be not the right thing to do.
I'm afraid that if I nest a lot of pages when the orientation changes the app could respond slowly since also the superviews will do something to manage this event.
So what I wonder is if what I am doing is completely senseless, if I should use Navigation controllers or some other way to manage my page changes.
Unfortunately my boss is not giving me enough time to study well the subject and so I would like an advice to follow the best solution possibly using the most standard and less complex component offered by the framework instead of the newest features.
I read a lot of web pages on the subject but it seems to me that there are many ways to manage the navigation beetwen pages and this makes me confused.
I apologize for my bad english but i'm tired and English it's not my first language.
You HAVE to do some studying. You will spend more time clearing up all your problems later otherwise... but, here are some tips.
Using nested ViewControllers leads to all kinds of trouble so if you are short of time, skip that.
Think of each "Page" as one ViewController. A ViewController has a property called View but that is actually just the top view of a whole hierarchy of views. A view is the base class for any visual object, like labels, buttons etc. All views can have subviews, so you can add an image under a label etc. and do really wierd stuff if you want to. I am just saying this to free your mind about how you can use views.
Now, ViewControllers are supposed to hold to code to ONE view hierarchy. That view hierarchy is for that View Controller only.
When the user wants to navigate to another page, you have a few alternatives:
NavigationViewController - that should be used when the user wants to delve down into data, like opening a detailed view of an item in a list etc. The NavigationViewController gives you help with back buttons, proper animation etc. You "pop" a viewcontroller to go back one level. If the user click the back-button, this is automatic.
TabBarViewController - use that if you want a tab bar at the bottom of the screen. Each tab is connected to a ViewController, that has it's own view hierarchy.
PushModal - If you are in a ViewController and just needs to get some data from the user, which is not part of the normal navigation of the app, you can push a new ViewController modally. This is the way you interact with iOS built in ViewControllers. This is also a good way to get a value back from the view controller.
There you have it. Go learn more. :)
It sounds like, for what you are using, you should be using a navigation controller. This will automatically handle pushing views onto the stack and then popping them off again later. This will also automatically create a back button (it is customizable) in the navigation bar.
If you are using iOS 5 or 6, I highly recommend trying out "storyboards" in Interface Builder. Storyboards allow you to graphically represent transitions (called "segues") between different views.
On top of being easier to design and implement, another advantage is that, if in the future you want to change the design of your application, you don't have to trawl through all your code and manually update each view connection.
I have a number of objects linking to each other in a circle. Each object holds a reference to it's neighbors, square and triangle are different class types:
The tow classes, triangle and square, are made visible with a ViewController, and they link to each other with segues.
So far, no problem. However, while I'm browsing around in my structure, I keep adding ViewControllers on top of each other. Not only does this seem a bad practice memory-wise, but it also presents the problem that when I want to quit this structure, I have to back-track by closing all ViewControllers that I opened.
So what I'm looking for, is a way to not add the next ViewController on top of the current on in the stack, but to replace the current ViewController with the next one.
I've been looking for a while for a solution, but have little success. So I feel that doing what I want is either impossible, or I'm just not getting an obvious point and don't know what to look for. Do I need a RootViewController for something like this? Or should I create a custom segue that dismisses the old ViewController before adding the new one? I'm really at a loss here.
Add all subView once , in viewDidLoad and give tags to all you SubView after that where you you want to show that view in viewController don't add it just bring it to front by calling the function [[self.view viewWithTag:1]bringToFront]
Since you are probably using a navigationcontroller, you should have a look at the UINavigationController reference. There are methods to modify the navigation stack. You cannot do this only with a storyboard. You will need some custom code.
You should have a look at the UINavigationController method setViewControllers:animated:.
Sounds like you want to do one of a couple things
Replace your rootViewController
Have a rootViewController which acts as a container for a single UIViewController and change that out as needed. In iOS 5 you can do this with a custom UIViewController, but or you could use one which Apple provided.UINavigationController` can do it, but unless you are also using it to navigate a tree like structure of view controllers it's probably not the best option.
Your best answer sort of relies on your need.
If your controllers don't have much state or don't get swapped in and out a lot you could use option 1.
If you expect users to swap between controllers often and quickly and/or your controllers require significant setup or have a lot of state then you might want to a NSArray and just use presentViewController:animated:completion: to show different controllers when needed. Storing your controllers in a NSArray has the added bonus of easily being able to identify their neighbors.
The UINavigation controler's method setViewControllers is an option.
Another would be to pop the most rencent view controller using popViewControllerAnimated:
In some cases popToRootViewControllerAnimated: would be best or even popToViewController:animated:. Hoever, I personally was not successful using popToViewController:animated: but that may have been my fault at that time.
Yes, I think you need a root view controller. I myself tried to exchange the root view controller the other day but failed doing so. In the end it was probably not the most elegant solution but easier for me to implement some dummy root view controller which does nothting but display my app logo in the background (Same as the default image but moved into negative coordinates in order to match the default image on startup. It is laying 'behind' the navigation bar and status bar.). It could show some empty black background or so. In the end it is will most probably never be visible.
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 have a User Filter section of my iPad app. There is a segmented bar with 5 buttons for 5 types of filters.
Clicking each of the buttons will load up the respective view..
My question is.. would the best way to handle the UI of each filter to have several views in this nib and load/unload accordingly.. or would best practice be to create the information in a scrollable view?
below is the setup..
http://imgur.com/iuufU.png
Thanks in advance...
Generally, go with separate views. The Scrollable view is an approximation of what you're trying to achieve (by the looks of things), whereas the separate-views more closely reflect your aims.
Some typical dvantages:
if you change your UI design, e.g. if one of those filters has to go in a different page, but 4 stay here ... then it's easy to move the whole View without changing the eixsting ones.
you can put each view in a separate NIB file (if they're different), or loaded from a separate ViewController instance (if they're the same), and you get some of the advantages of Apple's automatica memory management of VC's / NIBs.
Usually, people start with the same view for each filter, using a single VC class (instantiated multiple times, once per tab).
Then, as the app evolves, they find that one tab needs a different layout, so they add another VC class, and only need to update the alloc/init line for that one tab.
Ok so basically I have a UITabBarController as my root view controller. I have three tabs that will all have UINavigationController objects nested in them, controlling three table views each.
Each mode will access the same database in the same way, but just sort by different variables. Very similar to the way the iPod app works - whether you narrow down your search by Artist or Genre, you end up at the same "detail view" (the song playing).
My question is, should I link all three tabs in Interface Builder to the same UINavigationController, but just populate the table depending on the selected tab? Or should I create completely independent objects for each tab, and copy and paste code?
The first way seems more efficient and flexible, but the second seems like it will be a little more explicit and easy to read!
Thanks for any help :)
I think clearing the navigation controller stack on every tab switch (assuming it is not hidden when the non-uppermost navigation child is shown) would be much more resource-consuming than having all three/four UINavigationControllers available all the time (mostly for quick tab-switching).
Further, if the owning UINavigationController is the only object that retained (owns) the UIViewControllers on the stack, then you will also deallocate your UIViewControllers should you decide to reset the navigation stack (1-Nav scenario). Assuming of course they are not "statically" present inside a NIB.
TL;DR version
I'd use a separate UINavigationController for each tab, in a low memory-footprint app it will increase the visual performance of your tabs.