52

Suppose I have a nav controller stack with 2 view controllers: VC2 is on top and VC1 is underneath. Is there code I can include in VC1 that will detect that VC2 has just been popped off the stack?

Since I'm trying to detect the popping of VC2 from within the code for VC1 it seems that something like viewWillAppear or viewDidAppear won't work, because those methods fire every time VC1 is displayed, including when it is first pushed on the stack.

EDIT: it seems I was not very clear with my original question. Here's what I'm trying to do: determine when VC1 is being shown due to VC2 being popped off the top of the stack. Here's what I'm NOT trying to do: determine when VC1 is being shown due to being pushed onto the top of the stack. I need some way that will detect the first action but NOT the second action.

Note: I don't particularly care about VC2, it can be any number of other VCs that get popped off the stack, what I do care about is when VC1 becomes the top of the stack again due to some other VC begin popped off the top.

10 Answers 10

63

iOS 5 introduced two new methods to handle exactly this type of situation. What you're looking for is -[UIViewController isMovingToParentViewController]. From the docs:

isMovingToParentViewController

Returns a Boolean value that indicates that the view controller is in the process of being added to a parent.

- (BOOL)isMovingToParentViewController

Return Value
YES if the view controller is appearing because it was added as a child of a container view controller, otherwise NO.

Discussion
This method returns YES only when called from inside the following methods:

-viewWillAppear:
-viewDidAppear:

In your case you could implement -viewWillAppear: like so:

- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
    [super viewWillAppear:animated];

    if (self.isMovingToParentViewController == NO)
    {
        // we're already on the navigation stack
        // another controller must have been popped off
    }
}

EDIT: There's a subtle semantic difference to consider here—are you interested in the fact that VC2 in particular popped off the stack, or do you want to be notified each time VC1 is revealed as a result of any controller popping? In the former case, delegation is a better solution. A straight-up weak reference to VC1 could also work if you never intend on reusing VC2.

EDIT 2: I made the example more explicit by inverting the logic and not returning early.

5
  • It seems as though isMovingToParentViewController returns YES when a VC is being added as the child of another VC. I don't see how that helps me tell when VC2 is being popped. By the way, I don't care about VC2 in particular, I want to be notified each time VC1 is revealed as the new stack top.
    – JMLdev
    Sep 12, 2012 at 7:29
  • If VC1 is being revealed as a result of another controller popping off the stack, -isMovingToParentViewController will return NO when called from -viewWillAppear:. Make sense? Sep 12, 2012 at 13:34
  • I am calling this function from viewWillAppear of VC1. And it always returns NO, even if the VC2 above VC1 was popped when VC1 appeared. My solution just uses a hasAppeared property. The problem is that parent view controller of VC1 is not navigationController, but tabBarController.
    – Legoless
    Jul 31, 2013 at 0:11
  • @Legoless That makes sense, because VC1 & 2 are already children of the UITabBarController. You could also assign UITabBarController.delegate and implement -tabBarController:didSelectViewController: to be notified when the selected VC changes. Jul 31, 2013 at 2:32
  • 1
    @RyderMackay The delegation method would not work, because in my case VC2 is pushed onto navigation stack and is not part of UITabBarController.
    – Legoless
    Jul 31, 2013 at 13:52
15

isMovingTo/FromParentViewController won't work for pushing and popping into a navigation controller stack.

Here's a reliable way to do it (without using the delegate), but it's probably iOS 7+ only.

UIViewController *fromViewController = [[[self navigationController] transitionCoordinator] viewControllerForKey:UITransitionContextFromViewControllerKey];

if ([[self.navigationController viewControllers] containsObject:fromViewController])
{
    //we're being pushed onto the nav controller stack.  Make sure to fetch data.
} else {
    //Something is being popped and we are being revealed
}

In my case, using the delegate would mean having the view controllers' behavior be more tightly coupled with the delegate that owns the nav stack, and I wanted a more standalone solution. This works.

2
  • Checking isMovingFromParentViewController() within viewWillDisappear(_:) works well for me when determining if a view controller is being popped. May 4, 2016 at 1:38
  • This is the best answer/solution to this question as far as I'm concerned as this hooks directly into the navigation controller, and will tell you whether you are the view controller that is being popped off the stack, or if you are the view controller that is being reared as a result of something(s) being popped. Thanks! Apr 24, 2017 at 20:47
7

One way you could approach this would be to declare a delegate protocol for VC2 something like this:

in VC1.h

@interface VC1 : UIViewController <VC2Delegate> {
...
}

in VC1.m

-(void)showVC2 {
    VC2 *vc2 = [[VC2 alloc] init];
    vc2.delegate = self;
    [self.navigationController pushViewController:vc2 animated:YES];
}

-(void)VC2DidPop {
    // Do whatever in response to VC2 being popped off the nav controller
}

in VC2.h

@protocol VC2Delegate <NSObject>
-(void)VC2DidPop;
@end

@interface VC2 : UIViewController {

    id<VC2Delegate> delegate;
}

@property (nonatomic, assign) id delegate;

...

@end

VC2.m

-(void)viewDidUnload {
    [super viewDidUnload];
    [self.delegate VC2DidPop];
}

There's a good article on the basics of protocols and delegates here.

1
  • 4
    - (void)viewDidUnload is deprecated as of iOS 6.0.
    – lipka
    Feb 12, 2014 at 13:23
5

You can also detect in the view controller that is being popped

- (void)viewWillDisappear:(BOOL)animated {
    [super viewWillDisappear:animated];

    if ([self isMovingFromParentViewController]) {
        ....
    }
}
1

This is worked for me

UIViewController *fromViewController = [[[self navigationController] transitionCoordinator] viewControllerForKey:UITransitionContextFromViewControllerKey];
if (![[self.navigationController viewControllers] containsObject:fromViewController] && !self.presentedViewController)
{
  //Something is being popped and we are being revealed 
}
0

What are you specifically trying to do?

If you're trying to detect that VC1 is about to be shown, this answer should help you. Use UINavigationControllerDelegate.

If you're trying to detect that VC2 is about to be hidden, I would just use the viewWillDisappear: of VC2.

2
  • I need to detect, from within VC1, when the view controller on top of VC1 (which in my example is VC2) has been popped, revealing VC1 as the new stack top. I checked out the answer you linked to, but it seems that the willShowViewController delegate method cannot distinguish between VC1 being shown because it is pushed on the stack, and VC1 being shown because VC2 is popped off the stack.
    – JMLdev
    Sep 12, 2012 at 7:36
  • A simple solution to that problem is to initialise VC1 with a BOOL set to NO, then in viewWillAppear: you check the BOOL. If the BOOL is NO, set it to YES, otherwise perform your processing. This will guarantee that whenever VC1 is first pushed onto the stack the processing is not done, but in any other case it is.
    – user244343
    Sep 13, 2012 at 1:35
0

swift 3

override func viewWillAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
        super.viewWillAppear(animated)
        if self.isMovingToParentViewController {
            print("View is moving to ParentViewControll")
        }
}
0

I got the same situation but with slight more specific use case. In my case we wanted to determine if a VC1 is appeared/displayed when user tap on VC2's back button where VC2 is pushed on navigationController over VC1.

So I used help of snarshad's answer to customised as per my need. Here is the code in VC1's viewDidAppear in swift 3.

// VC1: ParentViewController
// VC2: ChildViewController

    override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
        super.viewDidAppear(animated)

        if let transitionCoordinator = navigationController?.transitionCoordinator,
            let fromVC = transitionCoordinator.viewController(forKey: UITransitionContextViewControllerKey.from),
            let toVC = transitionCoordinator.viewController(forKey: UITransitionContextViewControllerKey.to),
            fromVC is ChildViewController,
            toVC is ParentViewController {

            print("Back button pressed on ChildViewController, and as a result ParentViewController appeared")
        }
    }
-1

You can add an observer for NSNotification specifically JUST for your VC2.

// pasing the "VC2" here will tell the notification to only listen for notification from
// VC2 rather than every single other objects
[[NSNotitificationCenter defaultCenter] addObserver:self selector:@selector(doSomething:) object:VC2];

Now in in your VC2's view will disappear, you can post a notification:

-(void)viewWillDisappear
{
    [[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter] postNotificationNamed:@"notif_dismissingVC2" object:nil];
}
1
  • Add if (self.isMovingFromParentViewController) and this is the best answer.
    – Nike Kov
    Oct 7, 2016 at 10:31
-1

Yes, in VC1 you can check whether VC2 is popped or not. UINavigationController there is one method viewControllers which will returns the array of pushed Controllers, which are in the stack (i.e. which have been pushed).

So you iterate through loop by comparing class. If VC2 is there, will have match, otherwise not.

2
  • But it seems that when VC1 is first pushed on the stack, VC2 will not appear in the array of pushed controllers, and so this does not distinguish between VC1 being pushed onto the stack for the first time, and VC1 moving to the top of the stack after VC2 has been popped.
    – JMLdev
    Sep 12, 2012 at 7:46
  • you need to set a Bool for that whenever pushed keep true and when pop keep false then based on that you can use. Sep 12, 2012 at 9:12

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