I got the same question as yours when I am trying to implement a tab bar controller view with 4 tab items, and each tab item reusing the same view controller, and the custom logic for these 4 items are set through the property when the tab bar controller call viewDidLoad
. Let me show you what I have done as below:
1. Create a Tab Bar Controller with 4 view controllers
Open the storyboard, and drag a Tab Bar Controller
from the object library. And drag another 2 more view controller
onto the storyboard as well.
Remember to make a linkage between the tab bar controller and the 2 new view controller.
2. Create a reusing view controller for the 4 tab view
Create a new cocoa touch class, named ViewController
, and create you customisation properties in the @interface section. These properties will be set in the tab bar controller viewDidLoad
method, so the 4 tab views will use the same view controller, but the properties are not the same.
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
@interface ViewController : UIViewController <UITableViewDataSource, UITableViewDelegate>
// Define your customisation properties here, so that you can set it in the tab bar controller.
@property (assign, nonatomic) UITableViewCellStyle style;
@end
4. Create a view controller subclass of UITabBarController
Create a new Cocoa Touch class, named UITabViewController
, and make it subclass of UITabBarController
, and conform UITabBarControllerDelegate
.
For my case, I need to show a table view with different 4 cell style in 4 different tabs, so I will set the viewController
's style
property in the tab bar controller to achieve my target.
UITabViewController.h
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
@interface UITabViewController : UITabBarController <UITabBarControllerDelegate>
@end
UITabViewController.m
#import "UITabViewController.h"
@interface UITabViewController ()
@end
@implementation UITabViewController
- (void)viewDidLoad {
// Make UITabViewController as the delegate of UITabBarController
self.delegate = self;
[super viewDidLoad];
// Set-Up the UITableCell style for each tab item
[self.viewControllers enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:^(id viewController, NSUInteger idx, BOOL *stop){
UITableViewCellStyle style;
switch (idx) {
case 0:
style = UITableViewCellStyleDefault;
break;
case 1:
style = UITableViewCellStyleSubtitle;
break;
case 2:
style = UITableViewCellStyleValue1;
break;
case 3:
style = UITableViewCellStyleValue2;
break;
default:
style = UITableViewCellStyleDefault;
break;
}
SEL selector = @selector(setStyle:);
if([viewController respondsToSelector:selector]){
NSInvocation *invk = [NSInvocation invocationWithMethodSignature:[viewController methodSignatureForSelector:selector]];
[invk setSelector:selector];
[invk setTarget:viewController];
[invk setArgument:&style atIndex:2];
[invk invoke];
}
}];
}
Or if you need to set the customisation properties when the user selected different tab items, then you can add a new delegate method in the UITabViewController
@implementation section:
- (void)tabBarController:(UITabBarController *)tabBarController didSelectViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController{
// Check whether the view controller responds to the property setter method
SEL selector = @selector(setMyProperty:);
if([viewController respondsToSelector:selector]){
// Call the setter method with NSInvocation
NSInvocation *invk = [NSInvocation invocationWithMethodSignature:[viewController methodSignatureForSelector:selector]];
[invk setSelector:selector];
[invk setTarget:viewController];
[invk setArgument:&argument atIndex:2];
[invk invoke];
}
}