UISplitViewController in portrait on iPhone shows detail VC instead of master
I am using a Universal Storyboard in Xcode 6, targeting iOS 7 and above. I've implemented a UISplitViewController
which is now natively supported on iPhone running iOS 8, and Xcode will automatically backport it for iOS 7. It's working really well, except when you launch the app on iPhone in portrait running iOS 8, the split view's detail view controller is displayed when I expected to first see the master view controller. I believed this was a bug with iOS 8 because when you run the app on iOS 7, it correctly shows the master view controller. But iOS 8 is now GM and this is still occurring. How can I set it up so that when the split view controller is going to be collapsed (only one view controller displayed on screen), when the split view controller is displayed it shows the master view controller not the detail?
I've created this split view controller in Interface Builder. The split view controller is the first view controller within a tab bar controller. Both the master and the detail VCs are navigation controllers with table view controllers embedded inside.
Solution 1:
Oh man, this was causing me a headache for a few days and could not figure out how to do this. The worst part was that creating a new Xcode iOS project with the master-detail template worked just fine. Fortunately, in the end, that little fact was how I found the solution.
There are some posts I've found that suggest that the solution is to implement the new primaryViewControllerForCollapsingSplitViewController:
method on UISplitViewControllerDelegate
. I tried that to no avail. What Apple does in the master-detail template that seems to work is implement the new (take a deep breath to say all of this one) splitViewController:collapseSecondaryViewController:ontoPrimaryViewController:
delegate method (again on UISplitViewControllerDelegate
). According to the docs, this method:
Asks the delegate to adjust the primary view controller and to incorporate the secondary view controller into the collapsed interface.
Make sure to read up on the discussion part of that method for more specific details.
The way that Apple handles this is:
- (BOOL)splitViewController:(UISplitViewController *)splitViewController
collapseSecondaryViewController:(UIViewController *)secondaryViewController
ontoPrimaryViewController:(UIViewController *)primaryViewController {
if ([secondaryViewController isKindOfClass:[UINavigationController class]]
&& [[(UINavigationController *)secondaryViewController topViewController] isKindOfClass:[DetailViewController class]]
&& ([(DetailViewController *)[(UINavigationController *)secondaryViewController topViewController] detailItem] == nil)) {
// Return YES to indicate that we have handled the collapse by doing nothing; the secondary controller will be discarded.
return YES;
} else {
return NO;
}
}
This implementation basically does the following:
- If
secondaryViewController
is what we're expecting (aUINavigationController
), and it's showing what we're expecting (aDetailViewController
-- your view controller), but has no model (detailItem
), then "Return YES to indicate that we have handled the collapse by doing nothing; the secondary controller will be discarded.
" - Otherwise, return "
NO
to let the split view controller try and incorporate the secondary view controller’s content into the collapsed interface"
The results are the following for the iPhone in portrait (either starting in portrait or rotating to portrait -- or more accurately compact size class):
- If your view is correct
- and has a model, show the detail view controller
- but has no model, show the master view controller
- If your view is not correct
- show the master view controller
Clear as mud.
Solution 2:
Here is the accepted answer in Swift. Just create this subclass and assign it to your splitViewController in your storyboard.
//GlobalSplitViewController.swift
import UIKit
class GlobalSplitViewController: UISplitViewController, UISplitViewControllerDelegate {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.delegate = self
}
func splitViewController(splitViewController: UISplitViewController, collapseSecondaryViewController secondaryViewController: UIViewController!, ontoPrimaryViewController primaryViewController: UIViewController!) -> Bool{
return true
}
}
Solution 3:
Swift version of Mark S' correct answer
As provided by Apple's Master-Detail template.
func splitViewController(splitViewController: UISplitViewController, collapseSecondaryViewController secondaryViewController:UIViewController, ontoPrimaryViewController primaryViewController:UIViewController) -> Bool {
guard let secondaryAsNavController = secondaryViewController as? UINavigationController else { return false }
guard let topAsDetailController = secondaryAsNavController.topViewController as? DetailViewController else { return false }
if topAsDetailController.detailItem == nil {
// Return true to indicate that we have handled the collapse by doing nothing; the secondary controller will be discarded.
return true
}
return false
}
Clarification
(What Mark S said was slightly confusing)
This delegate method is called splitViewController: collapseSecondaryViewController: ontoPrimaryViewController:
, because that's what it does. When changing to a more compact width size (for example when rotating the phone from landscape to portrait), it needs to collapse the split view controller into only one of them.
This function returns a boolean to decide if it should collapse the Detail and show the Master or not.
So in our case, we'll decided based on if there was a detail selected or not. How do we know if our detail is selected? If we follow Apple's Master-Detail template, the detail view controller should have an optional variable having the detail info, so if it's nil (.None), there's nothing selected yet and we should show the Master so the user can select something.
That's it.