40

In Objective-C for Cocoa Apps it's possible to use such way to keep window always on top?

How to achieve the same with Swift?

self.view.window?.level = NSFloatingWindowLevel

Causes build error Use of unresolved identifier 'NSFloatingWindowLevel'

1
  • The link is no longer available.
    – Blaszard
    Mar 6, 2015 at 13:26

4 Answers 4

97

To change the window level you can't do it inside viewDidload because view's window property will always be nil there but it can be done overriding viewDidAppear method or any other method that runs after view is installed in a window (do not use it inside viewDidLoad):

Swift 4 or later

override func viewDidAppear() {
    super.viewDidAppear()
    view.window?.level = .floating
}

For older Swift syntax check the edit history

9
  • 2
    Where exactly that line should go? Jun 25, 2015 at 2:06
  • 1
    @LeoDabus Why do I get the error: 'Int' is not convertible to 'CGWindowLevelKey'?
    – Sam
    Jun 28, 2015 at 9:56
  • 3
    Breaks in swift 2.0. Any way arounds?
    – CalZone
    Aug 21, 2015 at 5:31
  • When set it to .FloatingWindowLevelKey or .MaximumWindowLevelKey, the window stays on top of full screen video, e.g. full screen YouTube video on Chrome, or VLC in full screen mode. This is not exactly what I want. Do you know the correct key which makes it float on top of other windows but below full screen videos? Oct 19, 2015 at 9:03
  • 1
    @sam try Int(CGWindowLevelForKey(Int32(kCGMaximumWindowLevelKey))) Nov 13, 2015 at 2:34
4

I would prefer this way. This ignores all other active apps, and makes your app upfront.

    override func viewWillAppear() {            
        NSApplication.sharedApplication().activateIgnoringOtherApps(true)
    }
1
3

While the other answers are technically correct - when your app will or did resigns active, setting the window level to .floating will have no effect.

.floating means on top of all the windows from the app you are working on, it means not on top of all apps windows.

Yes there are other levels available you could set, like kCGDesktopWindowLevel which you can and should not set in swift to make your window float above all.

None of them will change the fact that your window will go behind the focused and active apps window. To circumvent i chose to observe if the app resigns active notification and act accordingly.

var observer : Any;

override func viewDidLoad() {
    super.viewDidLoad()

    observer = NotificationCenter.default.addObserver(
        forName: NSApplication.didResignActiveNotification, 
        object: nil, 
        queue: OperationQueue.main ) { (note) in

        self.view.window?.level = .floating;

        // you can also make your users hate you, to take care, don't use them.
        //NSApplication.shared.activate(ignoringOtherApps: true)
        //self.view.window?.orderFrontRegardless();
    }
}

another way could be subclassing NSWindow and override the property .level with an always returning .floating, but the code above is less work and keeps control in the place where you want to set the window floating.

3

I spent a long time trying to make this work. I then realized there was a simple answer, just worded in a different way. Here it is: Change macOS window level with SwiftUI (to make a floating window)

As explained there:

You can access your windows with NSApplication.shared.windows and set the level for each one.

    for window in NSApplication.shared.windows {
        window.level = .floating
    }

EDIT: you can use other levels, including .screenSaver (highest, I think) and ```.normal`` if you want to return to standard behavior. Source: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/appkit/nswindow/level

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