Navigation controllers have view controller stacks to manage, and limited animation transitions.

Adding a view controller as a sub-view to an existing view controller requires passing events to the sub-view controller, which is a pain to manage, loaded with little annoyances and in general feels like a bad hack when implementing (Apple also recommends against doing this).

Presenting a modal view controller again places a view controller on top of another, and while it doesn't have the event passing problems described above, it doesn't really 'swap' the view controller, it stacks it.

Storyboards are limited to iOS 5, and are almost ideal, but cannot be used in all projects.

Can someone present a SOLID CODE EXAMPLE on a way to change view controllers without the above limitations and allows for animated transitions between them?

A close example, but no animation: How to use multiple iOS custom view controllers without a navigation controller

Edit: Nav Controller use is fine, but there needs to be animated transition styles (not simply the slide effects) the view controller being shown needs to be swapped completely (not stacked). If the second view controller must remove another view controller from the stack, then it's not encapsulated enough.

Edit 2: iOS 4 should be the base OS for this question, I should have clarified that when mentioning storyboards (above).

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+1 Great question! – Rog Nov 16 '11 at 3:27
1  
You can do custom animation transitions with a navigation controller. If this would be acceptable, please remove that constraint from your question and I'll post a code example. – Richard Brightwell Nov 16 '11 at 3:30
Javy? You out there? I'm getting sleepy. :) – Richard Brightwell Nov 16 '11 at 3:36
@Richard if it skips the hassle of managing the stack and accommodates different animated transition styles between the view controllers then navigation controller use is fine! – Javy Nov 16 '11 at 3:41
Ok good. I got impatient and posted the code. Give it a try. Works for me. – Richard Brightwell Nov 16 '11 at 3:41
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4 Answers

up vote 23 down vote accepted
+100

EDIT: New answer that works in any orientation. The original answer only works when the interface is in portrait orientation. This is b/c view transition animations that replace a view w/ a different view must occur with views at least a level below the first view added to the window (e.g. window.rootViewController.view.anotherView).

I've implemented a simple container class I called TransitionController. You can find it at https://gist.github.com/1394947.

As an aside, I prefer the implementation in a separate class b/c it's easier to reuse. If you don't want that, you could simply implement the same logic directly in your app delegate eliminating the need for the TransitionController class. The logic you'd need would be the same however.

Use it as follows:

In your app delegate

// add a property for the TransitionController

- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions
{
    self.window = [[UIWindow alloc] initWithFrame:[[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds]];
    MyViewController *vc = [[MyViewContoller alloc] init...];
    self.transitionController = [[TransitionController alloc] initWithViewController:vc];
    self.window.rootViewController = self.transitionController;
    [self.window makeKeyAndVisible];
    return YES;
}

To transition to a new view controller from any view controller

- (IBAction)flipToView
{
    anotherViewController *vc = [[AnotherViewController alloc] init...];
    MyAppDelegate *appDelegate = [UIApplication sharedApplication].delegate;
    [appDelegate.transitionController transitionToViewController:vc withOptions:UIViewAnimationOptionTransitionFlipFromRight];
}

EDIT: Original Answer below - only works for portait orientation

I made the following assumptions for this example:

  1. You have a view controller assigned as the rootViewController of your window

  2. When you switch to a new view you want to replace the current viewController with the viewController owning the new view. At any time, only the current viewController is alive (e.g. alloc'ed).

The code can be easily modified to work differently, the key point is the animated transition and the single view controller. Make sure you don't retain a view controller anywhere outside of assigning it to window.rootViewController.

Code to animate transition in app delegate

- (void)transitionToViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController
                    withTransition:(UIViewAnimationOptions)transition
{
    [UIView transitionFromView:self.window.rootViewController.view
                        toView:viewController.view
                      duration:0.65f
                       options:transition
                    completion:^(BOOL finished){
                        self.window.rootViewController = viewController;
                    }];
}

Example use in a view controller

- (IBAction)flipToNextView
{
    AnotherViewController *anotherVC = [[AnotherVC alloc] init...];
    MyAppDelegate *appDelegate = (MyAppDelegate *)[UIApplication sharedApplication].delegate;
    [appDelegate transitionToViewController:anotherVC
                             withTransition:UIViewAnimationOptionTransitionFlipFromRight];
}
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Yes, very nice! Not only does it do the trick, but it's a very simple and clean code example. Many thanks! – Javy Nov 23 '11 at 20:42
Doesn't his cause problems in landscape for you? Also: does this trigger the willAppear and didAppear methods of the viewControllers? – FelixLam Nov 25 '11 at 15:16
I know the appear calls are being done because I logged them. I also don't see why this would affect orientation changes. Can you elaborate why you think it would? – Javy Nov 26 '11 at 3:37
It turns out that @FelixLam is correct. My solution as posted here only works in portrait orientation b/c of how windows and the root view assigned to them work. I believe this to be a limitaiton (or requirement) of iOS. I have come up with a solution that works for all orientations and am adding that to my answer. It does require using a container class I called TransitionController. It works similarly to a UINavigationController without the navigation stack. – XJones Nov 26 '11 at 3:54
@javy, thanks for the question, it was a fun challenge figuring this out. On the other hand it's been a big time sync. :) Hope you can use it. – XJones Nov 26 '11 at 4:05
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You can use Apple's new viewController containment system. For more in-depth information check out the WWDC 2011 session video "Implementing UIViewController Containment".

New to iOS5, UIViewController Containment allows you to have a parent viewController and a number of child viewControllers that are contained within it. This is how the UISplitViewController works. Doing this you can stack view controllers in a parent, butq for your particular application you are just using the parent to manage the transition from one visible viewController to another. This is the Apple approved way of doing things and animating from one child viewController is painless. Plus you get to use all the various different UIViewAnimationOption transitions!

Also, with UIViewContainment, you do not have to worry, unless you want to, about the messiness of managing the child viewControllers during orientation events. You can simply use the following to make sure your parentViewController forwards rotation events to the child viewControllers.

- (BOOL)automaticallyForwardAppearanceAndRotationMethodsToChildViewControllers{
    return YES;
}

You can do the following or similar in your parent's viewDidLoad method to setup the first childViewController:

[self addChildViewController:self.currentViewController];
[self.view addSubview:self.currentViewController.view];
[self.currentViewController didMoveToParentViewController:self];
[self.currentViewController.swapViewControllerButton setTitle:@"Swap" forState:UIControlStateNormal];

then when you need to change the child viewController, you call something along the lines of the following within the parent viewController:

-(void)swapViewControllers:(childViewController *)addChildViewController:aNewViewController{
     [self addChildViewController:aNewViewController];
     [self transitionFromViewController:self.currentViewController
                       toViewController:aNewViewController
                               duration:1.0
                                options:UIViewAnimationOptionTransitionCurlUp
                             animations:nil
                             completion:^(BOOL finished) {
                                   [aNewViewController didMoveToParentViewController:self];
                                   [self.currentViewController removeFromParentViewController];
                                   self.currentViewController=aNewViewController ;
                             }];
 }

I posted a full example project here: https://github.com/toolmanGitHub/stackedViewControllers. This other project shows how to use UIViewController Containment on some various input viewController types that do not take up the whole screen. Good luck

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A great example. Thank you for taking the time to post the code. On the other hand, it's limited to iOS 5 only. As mentioned in the question: "[Storyboards] are limited to iOS 5, and are almost ideal, but cannot be used in all projects." Considering a large percentage (around 40%?) of customers still use iOS 4, the goal is to provide something that works in iOS 4 and greater. – Javy Nov 20 '11 at 23:23
Should you not call [self.currentViewController willMoveToParentViewController:nil]; in before the transition? – FelixLam Nov 25 '11 at 9:58
@FelixLam - per the docs on UIViewController containment, you call willMoveToParentViewController only if you override the addChildViewController method. In this example I am calling it but not overriding. – timthetoolman Nov 25 '11 at 16:27
1  
In the demo at WWDC I seem to remember that they called it before calling starting the transition, because the transition does not imply that the currentVC will move to nil. In the case of a UITabBarController the transition would not change any vc's parent. The remove from parent calls the didMoveToParentViewController:nil, but there is no will... call. IMHO – FelixLam Nov 28 '11 at 18:58
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OK, I know the question says without using a navigation controller, but no reason not to. OP wasn't responding to comments in time for me to go to sleep. Don't vote me down. :)

Here's how to pop the current view controller and flip to a new view controller using a navigation controller:

UINavigationController *myNavigationController = self.navigationController;
[[self retain] autorelease];

[myNavigationController popViewControllerAnimated:NO];

PreferencesViewController *controller = [[PreferencesViewController alloc] initWithNibName:nil bundle:nil];

[UIView beginAnimations:nil context:NULL];
[UIView setAnimationDuration: 0.65];
[UIView setAnimationTransition:UIViewAnimationTransitionFlipFromRight forView:myNavigationController.view cache:YES];
[myNavigationController pushViewController:controller animated:NO];
[UIView commitAnimations];

[controller release];
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Doesn't this stack view controllers? – Javy Nov 16 '11 at 3:44
Yes, because we are using a navigation controller. However, it gets around the limitation on what kind of transitions you can perform, which I thought was the core of your question. – Richard Brightwell Nov 16 '11 at 3:49
Close, but one of the big problems is there are multiple view controller to manage on the stack. I'm hunting for way to change view controllers completely. =) – Javy Nov 16 '11 at 3:51
Ah. I might have something like that too... give me a minute. If not, I'll delete this answer. – Richard Brightwell Nov 16 '11 at 3:54
Ok, I cobbled together two different bits of code. I think this will do what you want. – Richard Brightwell Nov 16 '11 at 4:00
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I struggled with this one for a long time, and one of my issues is listed here, I'm not sure if you have had that problem. But here's what I would recommend if it must work with iOS 4.

Firstly, create a new NavigationController class. This is where we'll do all the dirty work--other classes will be able to "cleanly" call instance methods like pushViewController: and such. In your .h:

@interface NavigationController : UIViewController {
    NSMutableArray *childViewControllers;
    UIViewController *currentViewController;
}

- (void)transitionFromViewController:(UIViewController *)fromViewController toViewController:(UIViewController *)toViewController duration:(NSTimeInterval)duration animations:(void (^)(void))animations completion:(void (^)(BOOL))completion;
- (void)addChildViewController:(UIViewController *)childController;
- (void)removeChildViewController:(UIViewController *)childController;

The child view controllers array will serve as a store for all the view controllers in our stack. We would automatically forward all rotation and resizing code from the NavigationController's view to the currentController.

Now, in our implementation:

- (void)transitionFromViewController:(UIViewController *)fromViewController toViewController:(UIViewController *)toViewController duration:(NSTimeInterval)duration animations:(void (^)(void))animations completion:(void (^)(BOOL))completion
{
    currentViewController = [toViewController retain];
    // Put any auto- and manual-resizing handling code here

    [UIView animateWithDuration:duration animations:animations completion:completion];

    [fromViewController.view removeFromSuperview];
}

- (void)addChildViewController:(UIViewController *)childController {
    [childViewControllers addObject:childController];
}

- (void)removeChildViewController:(UIViewController *)childController {
    [childViewControllers removeObject:childController];
}

Now you can implement your own custom pushViewController:, popViewController and such, using these method calls.

Good luck, and I hope this helps!

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Again we must resort to adding view controllers as sub-views of existing view controllers. Granted, this is what the existing Navigation Controller does, but it means we basically have to rewrite it and all it's methods. In reality, we should avoid having to distribute viewWillAppear and similar methods. I'm beginning to think there is no clean way of doing this. However, I do thank you for taking the time and effort! – Javy Nov 23 '11 at 14:52
I think, with this system of adding and removing view controllers as needed, this solution prevents you from having to forward those methods. – aopsfan Nov 23 '11 at 15:57
Are you sure? I used to swap view controllers in a similar manner before and I always had to forward messages. Can you confirm otherwise? – Javy Nov 23 '11 at 16:05
No, I'm not sure, but I would assume that, as long as you remove the view controllers' views as they disappear, and add them as they do appear, that should automatically trigger viewWillAppear, viewDidAppear, and such. – aopsfan Nov 23 '11 at 17:11
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