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I've seen this happen whenever i rotate a screen that has a UITableView on it. I've found out that it happens inbetween the willRotate and didRotate method calls in UIViewController My co-workers have seen it in other spots as well, usually around rotation. It hadnt started happening until very recently, and we're stumped as to how we should deal with it (google searches don't turn up the error message in its exact form). Has anyone else encountered this that knows what to do about it?

0

7 Answers 7

41

(Decided to take this out of comments and put it as an answer, since I think it's a darned good answer :)

Ha! I had an NaN calculation (div0), too. Key debugging aid: the message in question is output by NSLog(), so set a breakpoint on NSLog() and watch what the OS is doing at that time. For me, it was myUISlider.value = NaN.

To set breakpoint:

XCode 3.x

  • CMD-SHIFT-Y (debug window.)
  • Breakpoints button.
  • "Double-click for symbol"
  • Type in "NSLog" (no quotes.)

XCode 4.x

  • CMD-6 (breakpoints navigator.)
  • "+" to add breakpoint (lower left.)
  • Select ADD SYMBOLIC BREAKPOINT.
  • Symbol: NSLog
  • Confirm: Done.

XCode 5.x - 7.1 (at least) (Same as 4.x, except breakpoints navigator is CMD-7, now.)

Run app, watch it break on NSLog, check the stack traces.

8
  • 1
    This is the answered that actually matters when it comes to this exception. It's important to notice that this exception can be raised from components that use the CALayer and we API users don't know of their existence (thanks to encapsulation).
    – Pacu
    Jan 6, 2011 at 21:19
  • 1
    Great, +1 for debugging approach. Sep 15, 2014 at 13:02
  • 1
    @Caio: If you didn't get the breakpoint, (a) verify that your breakpoint breaks on NSLog() (do a test-log), (b) Perhaps the error you're getting is not output by NSLog(); see if you can break elsewhere. The key bit about my answer is: since I couldn't find the code to break on, I broke on the bit that output the message. Maybe look in your stack trace for some iOS exception handling code and try breaking on that.
    – Olie
    Oct 19, 2015 at 16:43
  • 1
    @Olie Finally find out what the hell was happening. The division by zero was made by internal UIScrollView methods, so that's why breakpoint was not breaking on NSLog. Sometimes one constraint can be 0.
    – Caio
    Oct 22, 2015 at 13:09
  • 3
    In Xcode 8, I had a CALayer position contains NaN terminating as an NSException. Setting an Exception Breakpoint: All Exceptions gave me the stack trace. (Symbolic Breakpoint: NSLog did not.) Sep 8, 2016 at 18:54
28

I've found the problem.

When you reset the frame of a tableview, it calls the delegate method tableView:heightForRowAtIndexPath: for each row in the table so it can recalculate its content size if it needs to. At that point, we do some special handling to return the height, and due to some bad assumptions in our code, we mistakenly returned NaN due to a divide by zero error (the variable we divide by was assumed to never be zero). Making sure that we do not divide by zero here fixed it.

4
  • I'm getting the same error (both position & bounds contain NaN, msgs usually come in pairs.) Only right before my view displays. No rotation, no tables, no fancy calculation. A simple dark-grey view with a label, "Processing..." and a progressIndicator. Anyone else got ideas on this one?
    – Olie
    Jul 12, 2010 at 23:30
  • 1
    put some breakpoints in your viewdidload/viewwillappear methods and make sure you're not dividing by zero anywhere accidentally.
    – Kevlar
    Jul 13, 2010 at 18:19
  • It may or may not be relevant but I had seen this crash much more consistently in Mavericks OSX 10.9, however was not seen again after the OSX 10.9.2 update. Mar 28, 2014 at 19:37
  • This gave me a better picture of the issue on my project... Since I'm using separate storyboards, the viewController that I'm presenting has a tableView that I'm not sending the correct values to. Oct 2, 2021 at 8:16
16

I've spent a day trying to find the code that causes same problem and solved it within a minutes after enabling "break on exception" in Xcode. Check this tutorial to see how to enable it.

2
  • 1
    Can you include a short summary of the page's content? This is so that future readers of this post can get the information they're looking for quickly and easily.
    – gobernador
    Jul 2, 2012 at 22:51
  • 3
    @gobernador I will as it's just helped me out! To find the exact line where your app died, go to the breakpoint tab on the left of xcode, click +, add a new Exception Breakpoint and leave the settings as default. Click Done and re-run your app.
    – spamoom
    Jan 23, 2013 at 10:57
13

I had this problem when i was assumed that:

tableView:heightForHeaderInSection: returned an NSInteger, but it returns CGFloat...

changing:

-(NSInteger)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForHeaderInSection:(NSInteger)section

to

-(CGFloat)tableView:(UITableView *)tableView heightForHeaderInSection:(NSInteger)section

fixed my issue.

Edit:

At some point I figured out how computers work below the C level, so I thought I would share it... (I will use an register names from x86_64 as I am most familiar with them, ARM would be slightly different but analogous)

int f(){
          float someFloat=5.0f;
          return someFloat;
       }

results in converting the value of someFloat to an integer type then copying that to a particular register: %rax then calling the return instruction.

float f(){
          float someFloat=5.0f;
          return someFloat;
       }

results in copying the value of someFloat from its current location to a particular register: %xmm0 then calling the return instruction.

So if you have the wrong prototype the calling code will expect the value to be in the wrong place, you will end up really returning a garbage value.

3

This error also cost me a long time.
At the end I found my colleague wrote something like this:

UIEdgeInsets a;
a.left = (...some calculation);
button.imageEdgeInsets = a;

And I rewrote these code like this and fix the issue:

UIEdgeInsets a;
a.left = (...some calculation);
a.top = 0;
a.bottom = 0;
a.right = 0;
button.imageEdgeInsets = a;

some value of UIEdgeInsets isn't initialised properly, and it sometimes turn into a NaN value, and crash the application.
More generally, you should check whether all values of C-style structs are initialised properly.

2

There is an another way to reproduce the issue: using insetBy(dx:dy:) on a too small rect

enter image description here

-1

You can try this yourTableview?.bounces = false. It works for me.

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