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im working with core-data for the first time, and my app is handling a lot of data (1000+ managedobjects at least), so it takes a while to load certain views.

example: i have a view that basically holds a tableview that contains information about specific core-data entities. the view will hold between 10 and 100+ items (grouped), and i have loading times to a couple of seconds. basically that is not really a problem, but i suspect users to get irritated when a view is loading without any information until it shows.

i load my data in the 'viewWillAppear' because it has to be reloaded every time due to change.

question: how can i display a loading screen (progress indicator) while the view loads? it does not have to be fancy, just maybe a unicolor screen with one of the standard progress indicators?

any inputs?

Edit: I managed to drop the loadingtime from apprx 3 seconds to a few milliseconds so i wont need it in this particular project, but anyways i think its a question worth asking =) so im still very interested in ideas =)

i already read this tutorial: Using AlertView For Progress Indication but i was not able to adapt it in a little testproject to use during view transitions.

sebastian

2 Answers 2

3
+50

You can set any placeholder view you like in viewWillAppear, then spawn off a background block to load the content. After the content is loaded, you update the screen to show them:

- (void)viewWillAppear {
    [super viewWillAppear];

    [self loadPlaceholderSubview];

    dispatch_async(dispatch_get_global_queue(DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_BACKGROUND, 0), ^{
        [self loadData];

        dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
            if ([self isStillNeeded])
                [self updateSubviews];
        });
    });
}   

A few notes:

  • [self isStillNeeded] is needed since the data is being loaded in the background, and the view might no longer be on the screen when the loading is completed (e.g. the user may have navigated away). How do you check this depends on exactly how your application works. In some cases, it may be as simple as checking whether the view still has a superview or window.

  • Make sure any interface update happens on the main thread (hence the dispatch to dispatch_get_main_queue() as this is required by the OS.

1
  • this sounds promising. i will give it a go tomorrow (its 23oo here) =) maybe i'll need some more information then - i've never worked with threads before. Mar 18, 2012 at 22:09
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This is an interesting question to me, since I'm just now having a go at similar issues. I also like the tutorial you cite. Here's a tentative answer:

The AlertView tutorial adds a UIActivityIndicatorView as a subview to an alert view. But addSubview: is a method of the parent class, UIView -- that is, you can add it to any view. So you could add it to whatever view is currently visible when you refresh the tableView, or I imagine you could insert an extra view behind the tableView just for this purpose.

As for accompanying explanatory text, if the activity indicator's host view is a textview, just assign the text as the textview's string. If you want more control over the placement and style of the text, explore using an NSAttributedString with a CATextLayer, which you apply using the view's addSublayer: method. (If you go with the last suggestion, you'll need to import the QuartzCore framework for the layer and CoreText for the attributed string.)

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