91

When I push a UIViewController, it has some title in back button at new UIViewController, if the title has a lot of text, It does not look good in iPhone 4s So I want to remove it.

If I add some code in prepareForSegue function, it is going to be a trouble.

Any better way to achieve this?

4

36 Answers 36

138

If you want back arrow so following code put into AppDelegate file into didFinishLaunchingWithOptions method.

For Objective-C

 [[UIBarButtonItem appearance] setBackButtonTitlePositionAdjustment:UIOffsetMake(0, -60) forBarMetrics:UIBarMetricsDefault];

For Swift

let BarButtonItemAppearance = UIBarButtonItem.appearance()
BarButtonItemAppearance.setTitleTextAttributes([NSForegroundColorAttributeName: UIColor.clear], for: .normal)

Another option give below.

In Objective C

self.navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = [[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithTitle:@"" style:UIBarButtonItemStylePlain target:nil action:nil];

In Swift

self.navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(title:"", style:.plain, target:nil, action:nil)

UPDATE :

    let BarButtonItemAppearance = UIBarButtonItem.appearance()

    let attributes: [NSAttributedStringKey: Any] = [
    BarButtonItemAppearance.setTitleTextAttributes([NSForegroundColorAttributeName: UIColor.clear], for: .normal)
            NSAttributedStringKey.font: UIFont.systemFont(ofSize: 0.1),
            NSAttributedStringKey.foregroundColor: UIColor.clear]

    BarButtonItemAppearance.setTitleTextAttributes(attributes, for: .normal)
    BarButtonItemAppearance.setTitleTextAttributes(attributes, for: .highlighted)

UPDATE SWIFT 4.1 :

    let attributes = [NSAttributedStringKey.font:  UIFont(name: "Helvetica-Bold", size: 0.1)!, NSAttributedStringKey.foregroundColor: UIColor.clear]

    BarButtonItemAppearance.setTitleTextAttributes(attributes, for: .normal)
    BarButtonItemAppearance.setTitleTextAttributes(attributes, for: .highlighted)

Using Offset

UIBarButtonItem.appearance().setBackButtonTitlePositionAdjustment(UIOffsetMake(-1000, 0), for:UIBarMetrics.default)
17
  • 9
    setBackButtonTitlePositionAdjustment does not always work, when the back button title is very long, but not long enough to change to "Back", the title in the middle will move right.
    – zgjie
    Jun 2, 2016 at 4:08
  • 3
    @zgjie it's just a subject of how large your offset. you can easily replace '-60' with '-6000' and forget about this problem
    – slxl
    Jul 29, 2016 at 18:03
  • 12
    Just a little precision here, the title belongs to the PREVIOUS view controller. So remember to set it there, before the presentViewController or pushViewController method.
    – Benjamin
    Aug 3, 2016 at 15:33
  • 1
    Hmm, this does doesn't work in AppDelegate. "Value of type AppDelegate has no member navigationItem"
    – Prabhu
    Aug 29, 2016 at 18:29
  • 3
    @DominikBucher I've made a category for this behaviour which hides back button title from every where in the app which is kinda "NON HACKY" way, just add the category in your project and you're done . I strongly disagree with the solution of setting position using setBackButtonTitlePositionAdjustment:forBarMetrics: if user has enabled button shape from accessibility settings the shape will show up ending up ugly navigation bar. Sep 20, 2017 at 18:53
82

Work's like charm on Swift 3

self.navigationController?.navigationBar.topItem?.title = " "
9
  • 1
    This is the only one that worked when using navigationController?.pushViewController(_, animated:)
    – D. Greg
    May 2, 2017 at 4:55
  • Thanks, mate. This one was the only one that worked out. Cheers.
    – Felipe
    Aug 3, 2017 at 23:13
  • 3
    Worked for me also Swift 4
    – christijk
    Oct 25, 2017 at 7:31
  • 1
    @MaksimKniazev, any fix for that problem? I found the only solution to update the title again in viewWillAppear:.
    – Hemang
    Mar 28, 2018 at 8:26
  • 10
    this removes the title of the previous view Oct 15, 2018 at 11:16
52

I'm using this line of code in AppDelegate file into didFinishLaunchingWithOptions method to remove the backbutton title.

Swift 2.x

let barAppearace = UIBarButtonItem.appearance()
barAppearace.setBackButtonTitlePositionAdjustment(UIOffsetMake(0, -60), forBarMetrics:UIBarMetrics.Default)

Swift 3.x

UIBarButtonItem.appearance().setBackButtonTitlePositionAdjustment(UIOffsetMake(0, -60), for:UIBarMetrics.default)

Swift 4.x

UIBarButtonItem.appearance().setTitleTextAttributes([NSAttributedStringKey.foregroundColor: UIColor.clear], for: .normal)
    UIBarButtonItem.appearance().setTitleTextAttributes([NSAttributedStringKey.foregroundColor: UIColor.clear], for: UIControlState.highlighted)
5
  • 17
    setBackButtonTitlePositionAdjustment does not always work, when the back button title is very long, but not long enough to change to "Back", the title in the middle will move right.
    – zgjie
    Jun 2, 2016 at 4:08
  • It's not an ideal solution. If we set any navigation title without change the left navigation bar item's title, the title will shift right because of having left navigation bar title insets.
    – mathema
    Jun 15, 2017 at 8:46
  • 2
    in iOS 11 it is break the back button position. It falls below its original position
    – korgx9
    Apr 15, 2018 at 13:06
  • How is that supposed to work? The text will still be accessible via VoiceOver. Apr 26, 2018 at 17:53
  • This creates problem when cancel or done barbuttonitem are not visible when presenting imagepicker or something Jun 12, 2019 at 6:15
23

Just need go to your Parent ViewController from where your other ViewControllers are dependent.

override func viewWillDisappear(animated: Bool) {
super.viewWillDisappear(true)
navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(title: "", style: .Plain, target: nil, action: nil)}
0
19

Just copy this code in didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions

Swift 5

UIBarButtonItem.appearance().setBackButtonTitlePositionAdjustment(UIOffset(horizontal: -1000.0, vertical: 0.0), for: .default)

Swift 4

UIBarButtonItem.appearance().setBackButtonTitlePositionAdjustment(UIOffsetMake(-1000.0, 0.0), for: .default)
1
17

it is simple. put a space in the title of the back button and ready. Remember that it has to be in the previous view where you want to remove the text.

enter image description here

1
  • Best solution IMO. Doesn't require you to set the whole app to a specific clear style which may have the side-affect of making any text barbuttonitems disappear. Answer could be made better if it mentioned that you have to drag a navigationItem to your controller if there isn't one there.
    – TheJeff
    Nov 27, 2019 at 3:31
17

On iOS 14 is now present the backButtonDisplayMode property in UINavigationItem class. So, to remove back button title you can use

navigationItem.backButtonDisplayMode = .minimal

in the viewDidLoad func of the viewController where you want remove it.

To remove it in all navigationBar I used the swizzling technique

import UIKit

private let swizzling: (UIViewController.Type, Selector, Selector) -> Void = { forClass, originalSelector, swizzledSelector in
    if let originalMethod = class_getInstanceMethod(forClass, originalSelector), let swizzledMethod = class_getInstanceMethod(forClass, swizzledSelector) {
        let didAddMethod = class_addMethod(forClass, originalSelector, method_getImplementation(swizzledMethod), method_getTypeEncoding(swizzledMethod))
        if didAddMethod {
            class_replaceMethod(forClass, swizzledSelector, method_getImplementation(originalMethod), method_getTypeEncoding(originalMethod))
        } else {
            method_exchangeImplementations(originalMethod, swizzledMethod)
        }
    }
}

extension UIViewController {
    
    static func swizzle() {
        let originalSelector1 = #selector(viewDidLoad)
        let swizzledSelector1 = #selector(swizzled_viewDidLoad)
        swizzling(UIViewController.self, originalSelector1, swizzledSelector1)
    }
    
    @objc open func swizzled_viewDidLoad() {
        if let _ = navigationController {
            if #available(iOS 14.0, *) {
                navigationItem.backButtonDisplayMode = .minimal
            } else {
                // Fallback on earlier versions
                navigationItem.backButtonTitle = ""
            }
        }
        swizzled_viewDidLoad()
    }
}

And in application(_:didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:) call

UIViewController.swizzle()
3
  • 1
    Good to know about .minimal, but you need to set this on the nav controller that pushed the current view controller onto the stack. Unfortunately you can't just set it on the displaying view controller...
    – teradyl
    Sep 13, 2021 at 21:58
  • Do I have to call the same method again inside swizzled_viewDidLoad?
    – ohtwo
    Sep 20, 2023 at 12:51
  • 1
    @ohtwo Yes, you have to call it. Swizzling exchanges method implementations, so with swizzled_viewDidLoad() you are calling the original one.
    – Giorgio
    Sep 21, 2023 at 13:01
9

You could create a subclass for all UIViewControllers you want this behavior for, and in the subclass's viewDidLoad:

override func viewDidLoad() {
    super.viewDidLoad()
    self.navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(
        title: "", style: .plain, target: nil, action: nil)
}

This way, you can choose which controllers you want the behavior for, without duplicating code. I prefer my controllers to just say "Back", rather than the title of the previous controller, so I set that title here.

8

You can use xcode 8 and swift 3.0

self.navigationController?.navigationBar.backItem?.title = " "
2
  • 3
    Won't this remove the title from the previous view controller altogether?
    – NRitH
    Nov 3, 2016 at 18:55
  • 1
    Yes, it will remove the title for all ViewControllers pushed from self.navigationController Dec 24, 2016 at 11:45
7

A method for iOS13.

let backButtonAppearance = UIBarButtonItemAppearance(style: .plain)
backButtonAppearance.normal.titleTextAttributes = [.foregroundColor: UIColor.clear]

let navigationBarAppearance = UINavigationBarAppearance()
navigationBarAppearance.backButtonAppearance = backButtonAppearance

UINavigationBar.appearance().standardAppearance = navigationBarAppearance
1
6
let barAppearace = UIBarButtonItem.appearance()
barAppearace.setBackButtonTitlePositionAdjustment(UIOffsetMake(0, -60), for:UIBarMetrics.default)

used this line of code in swift 3.0

1
  • 1
    will affect the cancel button for UISearchController
    – JAHelia
    Mar 12, 2019 at 10:36
5

Taking inspiration from rordulu's answer here, I ended up creating a custom UINavigationController and UINavigation bar which seems to handle all cases of this tricky problem.

1) Initialise new UINavigationController with your custom UINavigationBar:

class CustomNavigationController: UINavigationController {

    convenience init() {
        self.init(navigationBarClass: CustomNavigationBar.self, toolbarClass: nil)
    }
}

2) Set the backItem.title property of the navigation bar to an empty string, every time the view lays itself out

class CustomNavigationBar: UINavigationBar {

    override func layoutSubviews() {
        backItem?.title = ""
        super.layoutSubviews()
    }
}

Now every time you use this navigation controller and bar combination, it will never have back button text! 🎉

Note: this should work fine if using storyboards also, just ensure to drop the custom navigation bar component into the view

5
  • Amazing thanks so much! This is the best way to do it and should be the correct answer :)
    – GameDev
    Jul 13, 2017 at 12:49
  • 3
    Just realised that this has a side-effect in that it will wipe the navigation item title completely. So when the previous view shows, it will not have a title! I will carry on my search for the perfect solution to this annoying problem. Jul 14, 2017 at 15:35
  • damn you are right. How could i miss that! Please tell me if you find a fix of this issue. thanks
    – GameDev
    Jul 17, 2017 at 11:29
  • Could you find out the perfect solution @HarryBloom?
    – Hemang
    Mar 3, 2018 at 6:07
  • @Hemang Not a perfect solution, but I found something that works. Have added a second answer here stackoverflow.com/a/49094282/1532838 Mar 4, 2018 at 10:17
4

Simple Solution :

While you are pushing 2nd controller from 1st controller, put self.navigationItem.title = "" in viewWillDisappear of 1st controller. It hides back button title from 2nd controller.

Above statment hides 1st controllers title, hence when we came back we want title for 1st controller again. For that we have add title for 1st controller in viewWillAppear method of 1st controller.

Refer following methods (of 1st controller)

    override func viewWillDisappear(_ animated: Bool) {
    self.navigationItem.title = ""
}

override func viewWillAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
    self.navigationItem.title = "Title"
}
4

Works on Swift 5:

        self.navigationItem.backBarButtonItem?.title = ""

Please note it will be effective for the next pushed view controller not the current one on the display, that's why it's very confusing!

Also, check the storyboard and select the navigation item of the previous view controller then type something in the Back Button (Inspector).

1
  • title is not a get property, check Apple documentation
    – Saeed Ir
    Jun 28, 2021 at 1:08
3

I usually add or change the back button in viewDidLoad of the UIViewController.

Something like that should work:

let leftButton = UIBarButtonItem(title: "Back", style:     UIBarButtonItemStyle.Plain, target: self, action: "closeView:")
self.navigationItem.leftBarButtonItem = leftButton

Don't forget to change and implement the function that it's called to close the view.

Even easier, just change the title:

self.navigationItem.leftBarButtonItem.title = "Back"
1
  • 7
    This breaks iOS's built-in support for swiping left to right to navigate back, and IMHO, apps that break this are really irritating.
    – NRitH
    Nov 3, 2016 at 18:53
3
    if #available(iOS 14.0, *) {
        navigationItem.backButtonDisplayMode = .minimal
    } else {
        navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(title: "", style: .plain, target: nil, action: nil)
    }
2

Swift 3:

self.navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(title:"", style:.plain, target:nil, action:nil)
0
2

Adding a second answer here as my first only partially works. This method is less elegant in the fact that it requires calling a method in each view in the application, however it works without any side-effects.

So firstly, create a UIViewController extension class with a function to remove back button text and add a custom back button:

extension UIViewController {

func setBackButton() {
    navigationController?.navigationBar.backIndicatorImage = R.image.backArrow()
    navigationController?.navigationBar.backIndicatorTransitionMaskImage = R.image.backArrow()
    navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(title: " ", style: .plain, target: nil, action: nil)
}

Secondly, we can simply call out to this function in the viewDidLoad of each view controller you need it in.

2

Swift 4.2

UIBarButtonItem.appearance().setTitleTextAttributes([.foregroundColor: UIColor.clear], for: .normal)
1
  • Cancel and Done button of imagepicker are disappeared in this approach Jun 12, 2019 at 6:19
2

Updated Answer For Swift 4.2

Working with UIAppearance is a cleaner way of solving the problem but it would cause all the UIBarButtonItem to have a clear text. An improved version of the solution could be to check if the UIBarButtonItem is contained in a UINavigationBar.

    UIBarButtonItem.appearance(whenContainedInInstancesOf: [UINavigationBar.self]).setTitleTextAttributes([NSAttributedString.Key.foregroundColor: UIColor.clear], for: .normal)
2

Just create extension of UIViewController with override function awakeFromNib() and make UIBarButtonItem with an empty title and give to navigation backBarButtonItem.

extension UIViewController {

  open override func awakeFromNib() {
    let backBarBtnItem = UIBarButtonItem(title: "", style: .plain, target: nil, action: nil)
    navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = backBarBtnItem
  }

}
2

if you want to remove back button title when you open next screen

do this inside the function initialising and pushing a new screen:

navigationItem.backButtonTitle = ""

Full usage:

    let view = SomeView()
    let controller = UIHostingController(rootView: view)
    navigationItem.backButtonTitle = ""
    navigationController?.pushViewController(controller, animated: true)

But to customise back buttons for all navigation bars in your app you need to do this:

func setupNavBarAppearance() {
    let backButtonImage = Images.west.image.withAlignmentRectInsets(UIEdgeInsets(top: -5, left: -15, bottom: -5, right: -15))
    let backButtonAppearance = UIBarButtonItemAppearance(style: .plain)
    backButtonAppearance.normal.titleTextAttributes = [.foregroundColor: UIColor.clear]
    
    let appearance = UINavigationBarAppearance()
    appearance.titleTextAttributes = [NSAttributedString.Key.foregroundColor : UIColor.white]
    appearance.backButtonAppearance = backButtonAppearance
    appearance.setBackIndicatorImage(backButtonImage, transitionMaskImage: backButtonImage)
    
    UINavigationBar.appearance().standardAppearance = appearance
    UINavigationBar.appearance().scrollEdgeAppearance = appearance
    UINavigationBar.appearance().tintColor = .white
    UINavigationBar.appearance().isTranslucent = false
}

You can call it from your AppDelegate.swift

1

Swift 4.2 & 5

Instead of playing with the navigation bar tint color which will have side effects if you are using image picker anytime later in your code.

Use below code:

extension UIViewController {
        open override func awakeFromNib() {
            navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(title: "", style: .plain, target: nil, action: nil)
    }  
}

Call it from your first ViewController:

self.awakeFromNib()
1

Put the below code in any of the UIViewcontroller extension it will hide all the UIViewcontroller back text

open override func awakeFromNib() {
        navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(title: "", style: .plain, target: nil, action: nil)
    }
1

I have a simple solution for those, who don't want to use method swizzling or duplicating a similar code in different view controllers.

To remove back button title, create a UINavigationController subclass and override pushViewController(_, animated:) method:

final class CustomNavigationController: UINavigationController {

    override func pushViewController(_ viewController: UIViewController, animated: Bool) {

        super.pushViewController(viewController, animated: animated)

        let backBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem()
        backBarButtonItem.title = nil

        viewController.navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = backBarButtonItem
    }
}
0

I don't know why but I found problem with hiding back button title in iPhone pluses but in device without plus shows correct with

leftBarButtonItem.title = ""

So I found simple way. It is set tint color to clear in NavigationBar of NavigationViewController in autolayout. It may be problem if you use icons or text tiles with tint. But in my case I don't use it as all.

0

Just use this:

func removeBackButton(vc:UIViewController) {
        let button = UIButton.init(type: .custom)
        button.setImage(UIImage.init(named:""), for: .normal)
        let leftBarButton = UIBarButtonItem.init(customView: button)
        vc.navigationItem.leftBarButtonItem = leftBarButton
}

So call this method in viewDidLoad:

override func viewDidLoad() {
        super.viewDidLoad()
     removeBackButton(vc:self)
}
0

You can add this extension to UIViewController And then call this function in every viewDidLoad() like : self.updateBackButton()

extension UIViewController {
func updateBackButton(){
    if self.navigationController != nil {
        self.navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(title: "", style: .done, target: self, action: nil)
    }
}}
0

I would like to share a solution that works for me. Also, it can be adjusted base on your needs and requirements.

Note, in my case, I use a storyboard to specify CustomNavigationBar

Swift 4.2

class CustomNavigationBar: UINavigationBar {

    override func awakeFromNib() {
        super.awakeFromNib()
        guard let topItem = topItem else { return }
        removeBackButtonTitle(for: topItem)
    }

    override func pushItem(_ item: UINavigationItem, animated: Bool) {
        removeBackButtonTitle(for: item)
        super.pushItem(item, animated: animated)
    }

    func removeBackButtonTitle(for item: UINavigationItem) {
        item.backBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem()
    }
}
0

Works for Swift 4.2

Using the line of code in AppDelegate file into didFinishLaunchingWithOptions

    UIBarButtonItem.appearance(whenContainedInInstancesOf: [UINavigationBar.self]).setTitleTextAttributes([NSAttributedString.Key.foregroundColor: UIColor.clear], for: .normal)

    UIBarButtonItem.appearance(whenContainedInInstancesOf: [UINavigationBar.self]).setTitleTextAttributes([NSAttributedString.Key.foregroundColor: UIColor.clear], for: .highlighted)
1
  • This hides the back bar button text but unfortunately doesn't center the navigation bar title
    – Giorgio
    Jul 20, 2020 at 13:38

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