UINavigationBar disappears iOS7 - ios7

I have some wierd bug with UINavigationBar.
Sometimes it just disappears (actually if you move view to the half of screen, and then just release it)
Video example
In the first ViewController's viewWillAppear: method i call:
[self.navigationController setNavigationBarHidden:NO animated:YES];
The second ViewController's viewWillAppear: contains:
[self.navigationController setNavigationBarHidden:YES animated:NO];
I tried change animated: parameter, but it doesn't help.
Is it iOS7 bug or I just doing something wrong?

I found the reason for this.
That's happened because in info.plist
View controller-based status bar appearance is equal to YES
If change it to NO, then all will be fine

I got the same problem, and fixed it. the solution is:
Modify info.plist, set "View controller-based status bar appearance " to NO;
Delete all - (UIStatusBarStyle)preferredStatusBarStyle {} ;
If your view controller has different status bar style, use [[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleLightContent];
e.g. in viewWillAppear set to light, in disappear ,set to dark style.

You should define appearance per navigation controller.
If you want to have a navigation bar on the second controller only you should do the following in that particular controller:
- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[super viewWillAppear:animated];
[self.navigationController setNavigationBarHidden:NO animated:YES];
}
- (void)viewWillDisappear:(BOOL)animated
{
[super viewWillDisappear:animated];
[self.navigationController setNavigationBarHidden:YES animated:YES];
}
That way it will event work if you would need to change order of your controllers.

Related

Removing UINavigationItem prompt making black space on bottom of navigation bar

I have view controller in my storyboard with prompt text line but when I'm pushing a new view controller without prompt line in the navigation bar i get this (see picture) black space between the navigation bar and the view controller main view.
i already tried to remove the prompt using this:
[self.navigationItem setPrompt:nil];
but i still having this problem.
Here is a work-around for setPrompt. It doesn't animate, so it I'm calling it a work-around instead of a solution. Must be in viewDidAppear, not viewWillAppear.
-(void) viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated {
[super viewDidAppear:animated];
// This is needed for apple bug with self.navigationItem.prompt
[self.navigationController.navigationBar setNeedsUpdateConstraints];
}
I was running into the same issue, removing the prompt in viewWillDissapear before the next view is presented worked for me:
- (void) viewWillDisappear:(BOOL)animated {
[super viewWillDisappear:animated];
[[self navigationItem] setPrompt: nil];
}

Hide status bar in iOS7

I need to hide the status-bar on iOS7. I already tried to set:
Status bar is initially hidden
and
View controller-based status bar appearance
into the plist file. Status-bar doesn't appears when app in launched, but when I change view-controller (is a tabbed app) status-bar appears!
I already tried to set
- (BOOL)prefersStatusBarHidden
{
return YES;
}
and
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES withAnimation:UIStatusBarAnimationFade];
in a view-controller, but doesn't works. Any ideas?
Thank you in advance :)
UPDATE
I partially resolve the issue by setting "View controller-based status bar appearance" to "YES" into info.plist and calling the method
- (BOOL)prefersStatusBarHidden
{
return YES;
}
into the view-controller. But now I got another problem: status-bar appears when I launch another controller (UIImagePickerController). I tried to set [myPicker prefersStatusBarHidden]; but it seems to be read-only. Anyone know the solution?
P.S.: UIViewControllerBasedStatusBarAppearance = NO and UIViewControllerBasedStatusBarAppearance = NO are the same thing..
add this key to your info.plist
UIViewControllerBasedStatusBarAppearance = NO
Set
UIViewControllerBasedStatusBarAppearance = YES
in the info.plist and in each controller implement
- (BOOL)prefersStatusBarHidden {
return YES; // or NO
}
Then whenever you need a status bar appearance update (e.g. in the viewDidLoad of a controller) call setNeedsStatusBarAppearanceUpdate.
As per the documentation of setNeedsStatusBarAppearanceUpdate:
Call this method if the view controller's status bar attributes, such as hidden/unhidden status or style, change. If you call this method within an animation block, the changes are animated along with the rest of the animation block.
So for instance
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
[self setNeedsStatusBarAppearanceUpdate];
...
}
will hide/unhide the status bar (aside from other potential style changes) whenever the view controller's view loads.
Optionally you can also animate the transition wrapping the call in an animation block
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
[UIView animateWithDuration:0.5 animations:^{
[self setNeedsStatusBarAppearanceUpdate];
}];
...
}

UIImagePickerController breaks status bar appearance

In my .plist file, I have "View controller-based status bar appearance" set to NO. But after UIImagePickerController, my app behaves as if the option is set to YES.
In my app, I present a VC that presents a UIImagePickerController.
The problem happens like this:
After photo picker is presented, when a photo library is picked, the color of the status bar text changes.
Then once, UIImagePickerController is dismissed, status bar spacing
changes for the rest of my app and all the navigation bar for other controllers displays under the status bar.
Is there a way to solve this without managing status bar in my view controllers?
None of the solutions above worked for me, but by combining Rich86man's and iOS_DEV_09's answers I've got a consistently working solution:
UIImagePickerController* imagePicker = [[UIImagePickerController alloc] init];
imagePicker.delegate = self;
and
- (void)navigationController:(UINavigationController *)navigationController willShowViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController animated:(BOOL)animated
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES];
}
Regarding this awesome solution. For 2014 / iOS8 I found in some cases you need to ALSO include prefersStatusBarHidden and, possibly, childViewControllerForStatusBarHidden So...
-(void)navigationController:(UINavigationController *)navigationController
willShowViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController
animated:(BOOL)animated
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES];
}
-(BOOL)prefersStatusBarHidden // iOS8 definitely needs this one. checked.
{
return YES;
}
-(UIViewController *)childViewControllerForStatusBarHidden
{
return nil;
}
-(void)showCamera
{
self.cameraController = [[UIImagePickerController alloc] init];
self.cameraController.delegate = (id)self; // dpjanes solution!
etc...
I faced this same issue today. Here is my solution.
In the view controller who calls the image picker, set yourself as the delegate of the image Picker. (You're probably already doing this)
UIImagePickerController* imagePicker = [[UIImagePickerController alloc] init];
imagePicker.delegate = self;
Since UIImagePickerController is a type of Navigation controller, you're also setting yourself as the UINavigationController delegate. Then :
- (void)navigationController:(UINavigationController *)navigationController willShowViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController animated:(BOOL)animated
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleLightContent];
}
Replace UIStatusBarStyleLightContent with whatever style you are looking for.
The accepted answer will work if you have the 'View controller-based status bar appearance' set to NO in your .plist file. If indeed you need to control the status bar in some other view controllers and have this option set to YES, the other way to make UIImagePickerController to behave correctly is by subclassing it
// .h
#interface MYImagePickerController : UIImagePickerController
#end
// .m
#implementation MYImagePickerController
- (UIStatusBarStyle)preferredStatusBarStyle
{
return UIStatusBarStyleLightContent; // change this to match your style
}
#end
i faced the same problem.
here is my solution.
put this in the viewWillAppear of the view controller from which you are opening the image pickerview
-(void) viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated{
[super viewWillAppear:YES];
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES];
}
Can you try this. I think needsStatusBarApperanceUpdate will work.
1 -Set UIViewControllerBasedStatusBarAppearance to NO.
2- Call [[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleLightContent];
3- [self setNeedsStatusBarAppearanceUpdate];
I found this to offer proper handling, there's two parts.
- (void)navigationController:(UINavigationController *)navigationController willShowViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController animated:(BOOL)animated
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleBlackOpaque];
}
- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated {
[super viewWillAppear:animated];
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleBlackOpaque];
...
the UIImagePickerController itself presents view controllers, so this delegate works for all presenters on the stack.
the viewWillAppear ensures this view controller itself is always reset whenever a presenting view controller dismisses above it.
I had the same problem.
Add in info plist: "View controller-based status bar appearance" with value "NO"
Example here https://stackoverflow.com/a/19211669
This solution works for me.
This is probably a bug. I solved the problem by setting "View controller-based status bar appearance" set to YES and in every view controller pasting in the following code:
- (BOOL)prefersStatusBarHidden
{
return YES;
}
Then my app behaves as expected.
For hiding the status bar in UIImagePicker :
-
(void)navigationController:(UINavigationController *)navigationController willShowViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController animated:(BOOL)animated
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleLightContent];
}
and when UIImagePicker is dismissed to hide the status bar in View controller use the following code :
-(void) viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated{
[super viewWillAppear:YES];
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES];
}
try this ....
this will work in both cases i.e whether you use presentModalViewController and pushViewController
UIImagePickerController *picker = [[UIImagePickerController alloc] init];
picker.delegate = self;
delegate methods
-(void)imagePickerController:(UIImagePickerController*)picker didFinishPickingMediaWithInfo:(NSDictionary*)info
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES];
[picker dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:^{}];
}
- (void)imagePickerControllerDidCancel:(UIImagePickerController *)picker
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES];
[picker dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:nil];
}
All the above didn't work for me. I solved the issue by changing the presentation style to:
imagePickerController.modalPresentationStyle = UIModalPresentationFullScreen;
None of the above solutions worked for me.
I present UIImagePickerController as modal view controller. After dismissing UIImagePickerController the status bar state was:
[UIApplication sharedApplication].statusBarOrientation = 0 (UIDeviceOrientationUnknown)
[UIApplication sharedApplication].statusBarFrame = { 0, 0, 0, 0}
The solution that fixed the problem for me was restoring statusBarOrientation after dismissing UIImagePickerController:
UIImagePickerController *cameraUI = [[UIImagePickerController alloc] init];
[self.viewController presentViewController:cameraUI animated:true completion:^(void){ }];
...
[self.viewController dismissViewControllerAnimated:animated completion:^(void){
[UIApplication sharedApplication].statusBarOrientation = UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait;
}];
This code helped me to customize status bar style.
EDIT: this solution works if "View controller-based status bar appearance" == YES
#implementation UIImagePickerController (IOS7_StatusBarStyle)
-(UIViewController*)childViewControllerForStatusBarStyle
{
return nil;
}
-(UIStatusBarStyle)preferredStatusBarStyle
{
return UIStatusBarStyleLightContent;
}
#end
All the answers above is ok and can help.
I had the same problem having to manage the application runned under different iOS versions.
UIImagePickerController *imagePickerController = [[UIImagePickerController alloc] init];
if(IS_IOS8_AND_UP) {
imagePickerController.modalPresentationStyle = UIModalPresentationFullScreen;
} else {
imagePickerController.modalPresentationStyle = UIModalPresentationCurrentContext;
}
imagePickerController.delegate = self;
[self presentViewController:imagePickerController animated:YES completion:nil];
Then, in delegate:
- (void)navigationController:(UINavigationController *)navigationController willShowViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController animated:(BOOL)animated {
/* Cancel button color */
_imagePicker.navigationBar.tintColor = <custom_color>
/* Status bar color */
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleDefault];
}
Yet another solution which may work in some of the situations.
let imagePicker = UIImagePickerController()
imagePicker.sourceType = .PhotoLibrary
imagePicker.navigationBar.barStyle = .Black
Have you tried calling [self setNeedsStatusBarAppearanceUpdate] when your presenting view controller reappears?
I try to hide the status bar in UIImagePickerController in iOS7, but I still don't know how to do this. I use
- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES
withAnimation:UIStatusBarAnimationNone];
}
in the ViewController that call the UIImagePickerController, and set "View controller-based status bar appearance = NO" in the plist file. Hope this can help.
try this :
UIImagePickerController *picker = [[UIImagePickerController alloc] init];
picker.delegate = self;
and in the protocol implement, use this:
- (void)navigationController:(UINavigationController *)navigationController willShowViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController animated:(BOOL)animated
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES];
}
This solved it for me...:
- (void)imagePickerControllerDidCancel:(UIImagePickerController *)picker
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES];
[picker dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:nil];
}
Nothing here specifically fixed the problem in that I was having (and perhaps that the OP was having too), so I thought I would share my answer. Instead of hiding the status bar which I think is a buggy solution (I noticed that it would sometimes leave my app in a state where the status bar was hidden when it shouldn't be). I instead opted to try and play nice with the UIStatusBarStyles.
When the UIImagePickerController has its view presented I set the status bar style to default since the default background color is a light grey.
- (void)navigationController:(UINavigationController *)navigationController willShowViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController animated:(BOOL)animated
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleDefault animated:YES];
}
Then, when the image picker is dismissed, I set it back to the UIStatusBarStyleLightContent.
- (void)imagePickerController:(UIImagePickerController *)picker didFinishPickingMediaWithInfo:(NSDictionary *)info
{
//work
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleLightContent animated:YES];
[self dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:NULL];
}
- (void)imagePickerControllerDidCancel:(UIImagePickerController *)picker
{
//work
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarStyle:UIStatusBarStyleLightContent animated:YES];
[self dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:NULL];
}
In this case,We are using 2 steps
In first step:
Add in info.plist: "View controller-based status bar appearance" with value "NO"
In Second step: Use/call this code with delegate of UIImagePickerController
- (void)navigationController:(UINavigationController *)navigationController willShowViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController animated:(BOOL)animated
{
if([navigationController isKindOfClass:[UIImagePickerController class]])
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES];
}
In case of IOS-7 add One more Function
- (BOOL)prefersStatusBarHidden
{
return YES;
}
As of iOS 8.1, it seems like they've finally fixed this bug! I was able to remove all of the workarounds I employed from my code.
Using the default iOS 8 behaviour I was having problems with the status bar appearing when I wanted it hidden.
The solution I found was that, directly after calling presentPopover from my view controller I did:
[self performSelector:#selector(setNeedsStatusBarAppearanceUpdate) withObject:nil afterDelay:0.01];
I also had to add this to my main view controller:
- (UIViewController *)childViewControllerForStatusBarHidden
{
return nil;
}
So I had this problem and I was able to solve it by simply implementing a single delegate function. The background of my status bar is black, and so UIStatusBarStyle for my application is .LightContent. When I presented the UIImagePickerController to select a photo from the device storage, the status bar was fine. However, upon clicking into a directory such as "Camera Roll" or "Favorites," effectively pushing onto the navigation stack, the status bar disappeared. Upon selecting a photo, there was no status bar at all; upon dismissing another modal view controller, only the battery was present, indicating the rest of the status bar may be black as well.
I tried some of the other solutions such as extending UIImagePickerController, but in Swift, you cannot override using extensions. I then tried to subclass UIImagePickerController and tried to hide its status bar on viewWillAppear() and unhiding the status bar on viewWillDisappear. I was able to see the status bar hide with a .Slide animation, but since the status bar was invisible upon selecting a directory, I was not able to see the status bar unhide. Again, the green battery came back with the rest of the status bar invisible upon dismissing a modal view controller. I also tried overriding prefersStatusBarHidden(), but that function was never called, so I tried calling setNeedsStatusBarAppearanceUpdate() to ensure that prefersStatusBarHidden() is called by the system, but it still is not called. Also, there is the suggestion to set the status bar to be hidden on the delegate method navigationController willShowViewController. Once again, all this does is hide the status bar, which does not solve the problem. As it turns out, it seems that the status bar style is changed upon pushing onto the navigation stack of the UIImagePickerController. To solve the problem entirely, I did not have to write extensions or subclass UIImagePickerController. All you need to do is set the delegate and set the status bar style to remain the same. This addition made it as if the problem never existed.
let pickerController = UIImagePickerController()
pickerController.delegate = self
func navigationController(navigationController: UINavigationController, willShowViewController viewController: UIViewController, animated: Bool) {
UIApplication.sharedApplication().setStatusBarStyle(.LightContent, animated: false)
}
I actually found a better way to set the status bar background color in Image Picker. Basically you need to set the backgroundImage from the navigationBar to nil, because is default in Image Picker has a backgroundImage as a white Image.

UINavigationController navigationBarHidden

Hey everbody, i'm having problem with a simple question.
I have a NavigationController, 01.xib ans 02.xib.
I set in IB NavigationController to dont display the navigationBar. Well, when i go to 02.xib, i set it to appear.
[self navigationController].navigationBarHidden = NO;
Everything works fine.
But, when i come back to 01.xib with the top button, the bar still appearing in the 01.xib.
How can i fix that?
Thanks!
Use this in first view controller:
- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[super viewWillAppear:animated];
[[self navigationController] setNavigationBarHidden:YES animated:animated];
}
I believe this is happening because they are referencing the same navigation controller.
You could set it hidden again in the viewDidAppear method of your 01 class.
-(void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
[super viewDidAppear:animated];
[self navigationController].navigationBarHidden = YES;
}

UIScrollView shifts below navigation and status bar

I have view which contains a scrollView. When the view shows up the image appears in full screen (320x480) hiding the status and navigation bar. When I tap the screens - status and navigation bar appears on the screen. But this thing shifts the UIScrollView below the the navigation bar. I want the status and nav bar to show over my scroll view.
Like it happens in the photos app. On tapping the image the status and nav bar shows over the scrollView.
Below is how I am positioning the view
//What I have done in viewDidLoad
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES animated:NO];
self.wantsFullScreenLayout = YES;
scrollView = [[UIScrollView alloc] initWithFrame:[[UIScreen mainScreen] applicationFrame]];
self.view = scrollView;
Below is what I am doing on detecting a single tap
- (void)tapDetectingImageView:(TapDetectingImageView *)view gotSingleTapAtPoint:(CGPoint)tapPoint {
// single tap hide/unhide the status and nav bar
NSLog(#"got a single tap");
if (self.navigationController.navigationBarHidden == NO)
{
[self.navigationController setNavigationBarHidden:YES animated:NO];
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES animated:YES];
}
else
{
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:NO animated:YES];
[self.navigationController setNavigationBarHidden:NO animated:NO];
}
}
Just a pointer for you guys -
If I use [self.view addSubview:scrollView]; I dont see this issue. But this mess up my landscape orientation code.
Anyone who can shed some light what I might be doing wrong - would be great help!
There appears to be some special handling inside UIScrollView when the navigation toolbars are toggled. As you pointed out at the end of your question, if you put the scroll view inside a containing UIView, this repositioning problem does not occur.
To fix the landscape issues, make sure you're setting the autoresizingMask on both the container view and the scroll view. I did not have to add any additional handling for landscape mode in my project.
I found the solution myself.
In my tap detecting code's else fn I add the below line in the last.
scrollView.contentOffset = CGPointMake(parentScrollView.contentOffset.x,0);
Not sure if this is the right approach. But if anyone can suggest a better approach - more than welcome!