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When do I need to call -[UIViewController initWithNibName:bundle:]?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-08 20:58 出处:网络
In post Using initWithNibName changes absolutely nothing, he shows two uses of the same View Nib definition, in the first case, he simply calls alloc/init and the second, he specifies initWithNibName.

In post Using initWithNibName changes absolutely nothing, he shows two uses of the same View Nib definition, in the first case, he simply calls alloc/init and the second, he specifies initWithNibName.

So, while this always works:

MyViewController *vctrlr = [[MyViewController alloc] initWithNibName:@"MyViewController" bundle:nil]; [self.navigationController pushViewController:vctrlr animated:YES]; [vctrlr release];

The following works for all the View Controllers I've inherited, but not mine!

TheirViewController *vctrlr = [[Thei开发者_如何学PythonrViewController alloc] init]; [self.navigationController pushViewController:vctrlr animated:YES]; [vctrlr release];

New to iOS programming, I inherited some code. All the View Controllers' views are defined in IB, but there was inconsistent allocation/init creation of those view controllers. I created a new View Controller and XIB, but it does not work unless I use initWithNibName (it crashes when I push the view controller onto the Nav Controller). I cannot tell how my view controller is different than the others... any hints? I was able to delete the initNibName usage for all the other view controllers in the app except mine.


You can pass any string name to initWithNibName:. You are not just restricted to calling initWithNibName:@"MyClassName" when your class is called MyClassName. It could be initWithNibName:@"MyClassNameAlternateLayout".

This becomes useful if you need to load a different nib depending on what the app needs to do. While I try to have one nib per view controller per device category (iPhone or iPad) whenever possible to make development and maintenance simpler, I could understand if a developer would want to provide a different layout or different functionality at times.

Another important point is that initWithNibName:bundle: is the designated initializer for UIViewController. When you call -[[UIViewController alloc] init], then initWithNibName:bundle: is called behind the scenes. You can verify this with a symbolic breakpoint. In other words, if you simply want the default behavior, it is expected that you can call -[[UIViewController alloc] init] and the designated initializer will be called implicitly.

If, however, you are calling -[[UIViewController alloc] init] and not getting the expected behavior, it's likely that your UIViewController subclass has implemented - (id)init incorrectly. The implementation should look like one of these two examples:

- (id)init
{
    self = [super init];
    if (self) {
        // custom initialization
    }
    return self;
}

or

- (id)init
{
    NSString *aNibName = @"WhateverYouWant";
    NSBundle *aBundle = [NSBundle mainBundle]; // or whatever bundle you want
    self = [self initWithNibName:aNibName bundle:aBundle];
    if (self) {
        // custom initialization
    }
    return self;
}


If you want to work following code:

MyViewController *vctrlr = [[MyViewController alloc] inil];
[self.navigationController pushViewController:vctrlr animated:YES];

Then you should implement following both methods in MyViewController:

- (id)init
{
   self = [super initWithNibName:@"MyViewController" bundle:nil];
   if (self != nil)
   {
       // Do initialization if needed
   }
   return self;
}
- (id)initWithNibName:(NSString *)nibName bundle:(NSBundle *)bundle
{
    NSAssert(NO, @"Init with nib");
    return nil;
}
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