The possible values for UIDevice.orientation include UIDeviceOrientationFaceUp and UIDeviceOrientationFaceDown. While it might be useful to know that the device is flat, this doesn't tell us whether it's flat displaying an interface oriented in portrait or landscape mode. Is there a way to find the current orientation of the GUI in cases where the device is returning ambiguous information? I suppose I could track orientation change events to remember the last portrait/landscape orientation or check the main UIView's bounds height and width, but that seems kludgey. Is there a property on the device or UIView that I'm missing?
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In a viewcontroller you can simply use the code:
The UIInterfaceOrientation is an enum:
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You can get orientation by 3 ways:
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If you just care that the device is landscape or portrait, there's some nice convenience methods on the viewcontroller:
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Status bar orientation (statusBarOrientation) always returns the interface orientation even if the status bar is hidden. You can use the status bar orientation without a view controller. It gives you the current view orientation, not the device orientation.
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I've seen the same situation. Specifically in this flow:
At this point, any orientation checks I've seen return an invalid orientation of 5, so it's not directly possible to determine if a landscape or portrait layout should be used. (I'm doing custom layout positioning on a per-orientation basis, so this is significant information) In my case, a bounds width check on the view is used to determine the true state of things, but I'd love to know if others have addressed differently. |
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Here's a codesnippet you might find useful:
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