I currently encountering a problem with my iOS application.
I am attempting to incorporate a gradual login pattern, i.e.: the use can access some of the app without being required to login.
Required features are as follows:
- At all times the user can view all navigation items that require login
- When the user attempts to access an uiview(controller) that requires login, they will be prompted with a UIAlertView asking them to log in. (Preferably the UIAlertView will appear when the app recognised the initiated segue destination is restricted).
At first I used a subclass of UIViewController that, in the designated initialiser (initWithCoder), would check NSUserDefaults to see if the user was logged in. I then subclassed off of that. Limitations were as follows:
- Couldn't use other subclasses of UIViewController, namely UITableViewController
- The UIAlertView came up after the view had appeared, which i am assuming would cause errors if the subclassed UIViewController assumed the user was logged in.
Question summary:
I would like to know how to conditionally prevent users from accessing certain UIView(Controller)s and subclasses of UIViewController, and when that happens present a UIAlertView.
Update 1
Could categories and/or protocols be a viable solution?
Update 2
CodaFi pointed out singletons as a great solution to manage the user's state.
With that implemented I now need to figure out how to control the user's access.
As I am using storyboards I feel that the most versatile implementation would be subclassing UIStoryboardSegue, and on the perform method check if the user is attempting to access an restricted UIViewController (perhaps restricted controllers have a protocol property that specifies the required status: logged in/out). However the pitfall here is that you cannot choose the class/subclass of a UIStoryboardSegue in the storyboard graphic editor. I am aware that I could do it programatically, however that seems tedious as i would have to add IBActions and like that to methods that perform segues, furthermore I don't think that would work with the way elements such as navigationController and tabbarControllers behave.
Does anybody have a viable solution to restricting the user's navigation?
Update 3
I've added an answer to this question, however I still deem it as unanswered because the answer I've written doesn't take into account segues between navigation bar controllers. However it may help some people.