I'm having some difficulty managing a segue. My view controller hierarchy is as follows:
- BHGSplitViewController (subclass of UISplitViewController)
- UINavigationController
- MasterViewController (subclass of UITableViewController)
- UINavigationController
- DetailViewController (subclass of UIViewController)
- UINavigationController
These have the following properties:
BHGSplitViewController:
@interface BHGSplitViewController : UISplitViewController
@property (nonatomic, strong) MasterViewController* masterVC;
@end
MasterViewController:
@interface MasterViewController : UITableViewController
@property (strong, nonatomic) MenuDataSource *menuDataSource;
@property (strong, nonatomic) DetailViewController *detailViewController;
@end
DetailViewController:
@interface DetailViewController : UIViewController
@property (strong, nonatomic) NSURL* URL;
@property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet UIWebView *webView;
@end
These are related in my main storyboard through relationship segues.
After the initial app launch, I modally display a login view controller. After login, I segue back to my BHGSplitViewController
, but I need to set some data. In the loginViewController
's prepareForSegue
method I attempt the following:
BHGSplitViewController *splitVC = [segue destinationViewController];
splitVC.masterVC.menuDataSource.var = someValue;
But, when debugging, splitVC.masterVC = nil
, so obviously attempting to set a value on it is not going to work. How do I set-up and retain those relationships?
I inherited a version of this app that was built with storyboards. I'm guessing that I need to start intializing these properties. What's the best way to do that with storyboards? Do I need to override initWithCoder:
? Should I be setting these properties in viewDidLoad
?
Edit: Explanation of segue
So, I'm loading up my BHGSplitViewController
in my AppDelegate
and setting it up to handle collapses, etc. After that, I need to immediately display a modal view for login. I need this to animate in like a push (but Apple won't allow that), so I'm trying to hack my way around that by using a custom segue (which is hacky and I hate it):
Present Segue:
- (void)perform {
UIViewController *srcViewController = (UIViewController *) self.sourceViewController;
UIViewController *destViewController = (UIViewController *) self.destinationViewController;
UIView *prevView = srcViewController.view;
UIView *destView = destViewController.view;
UIWindow *window = [[[UIApplication sharedApplication] delegate] window];
[window insertSubview:destView aboveSubview:prevView];
[destView enterLeft:0.1 then:^{
[srcViewController presentViewController:destViewController animated:NO completion:nil];
}];
}
Dismiss Segue:
- (void)perform {
UIViewController *srcViewController = (UIViewController *) self.sourceViewController;
UIViewController *destViewController = self.destinationViewController;
UIView *prevView = srcViewController.view;
UIView *destView = destViewController.view;
UIWindow *window = [[[UIApplication sharedApplication] delegate] window];
[window insertSubview:destView aboveSubview:prevView];
[destView enterRight:0.1 then:^{
[srcViewController presentViewController:destViewController animated:NO completion:nil];
}];
}