I have a container UIView
. Its children's positions are managed with autolayout. However, I want to position the container itself explicitly.
The container exists within a UIView
subclass that I call VideoPreviewView
. The container is named contentOverlayView
.
Here's my code to add an obvious red child to the container that fills it, except for a 1 pixel margin at the edges:
UIView *const redView = [UIView new];
[redView setTranslatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints: NO];
[redView setBackgroundColor: [UIColor redColor]];
[[videoView contentOverlayView] addSubview: redView];
[[videoView contentOverlayView] addConstraints:
[NSLayoutConstraint
constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"H:|-(1@900)-[redView]-(1@900)-|"
options:0
metrics:nil
views:NSDictionaryOfVariableBindings(redView)]];
[[videoView contentOverlayView] addConstraints:
[NSLayoutConstraint
constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"V:|-(1@900)-[redView]-(1@900)-|"
options:0
metrics:nil
views:NSDictionaryOfVariableBindings(redView)]];
Setting frame in layoutSubviews
My initial approach to keeping the container view positioned within was to simply override layoutSubviews
for VideoPreviewView
and explicitly set the frame of the container there, like this:
-(void) layoutSubviews
{
// Other stuff snipped out.
const CGRect videoBounds = [self videoBounds];
[_contentOverlayView setFrame: videoBounds];
[super layoutSubviews];
}
…But this didn't work. If I use recursiveDescription
on videoView
I get:
<VideoPreviewView: 0x146a54f0; frame = (0 0; 320 460); layer = <CALayer: 0x146a5640>>
| <UIView: 0x145b6610; frame = (0 0; 2 2); layer = <CALayer: 0x145b6680>>
| | <UIView: 0x145bff60; frame = (1 1; 0 0); layer = <CALayer: 0x145bffd0>>
It has just enough width to respect the margins I required, but the position is completely wrong, and the frame isn't as large as I want.
I used _autoLayoutTrace
on the container view to try to resolve this and I'm told that the layout is ambiguous:
UIWindow:0x145a3a50
| UIView:0x145a6e60
| | HPBezelView:0x1468d580
| | | UIImageView:0x145aab30
| | *VideoPreviewView:0x146a54f0
| | | *UIView:0x145b6610- AMBIGUOUS LAYOUT for UIView:0x145b6610.minX{id: 5}, UIView:0x145b6610.minY{id: 13}, UIView:0x145b6610.Width{id: 8}, UIView:0x145b6610.Height{id: 16}
| | | | *UIView:0x145bff60- AMBIGUOUS LAYOUT for UIView:0x145bff60.minX{id: 4}, UIView:0x145bff60.minY{id: 12}, UIView:0x145bff60.Width{id: 9}, UIView:0x145bff60.Height{id: 17}
This suggested to me that if I'm using autolayout, the frame is ignored, so I need to set the container's frame using autolayout too.
Adding size constraints
Some other posts and blogs and such also suggest this course of action. So I added some constraints to control the width and height of the container:
_contentOverlayWidthConstraint =
[NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem: contentOverlayView
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeWidth
relatedBy: NSLayoutRelationEqual
toItem: nil
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeNotAnAttribute
multiplier: 1.0
constant: 1];
_contentOverlayHeightConstraint =
[NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem: contentOverlayView
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeHeight
relatedBy: NSLayoutRelationEqual
toItem: nil
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeNotAnAttribute
multiplier: 1.0
constant: 1];
[contentOverlayView addConstraints: @[_contentOverlayWidthConstraint, _contentOverlayHeightConstraint]];
I updated my layoutSubviews
method to adjust the "constants" on these constraints:
-(void) layoutSubviews
{
const CGRect videoBounds = [self videoBounds];
[_contentOverlayView setFrame: videoBounds];
[_contentOverlayWidthConstraint setConstant: CGRectGetWidth(videoBounds)];
[_contentOverlayHeightConstraint setConstant: CGRectGetHeight(videoBounds)];
[super layoutSubviews];
}
This works a little better – the red view is visible now and has the correct size, but it is still located at the wrong place. I still get ambiguities from the trace:
UIWindow:0x17d76a00
| UIView:0x17d7dfd0
| | HPBezelView:0x17d7d7c0
| | | UIImageView:0x17d82240
| | *VideoPreviewView:0x17d925e0
| | | UIView:0x17d96790
| | | *UIView:0x17d96830- AMBIGUOUS LAYOUT for UIView:0x17d96830.minX{id: 9}, UIView:0x17d96830.minY{id: 16}
| | | | *UIView:0x17d9ae90- AMBIGUOUS LAYOUT for UIView:0x17d9ae90.minX{id: 8}, UIView:0x17d9ae90.minY{id: 15}
… so, the width and height ambiguities have gone, but the position ambiguities remain.
Adding position constraints
So, I added two more layout constraints to set the container's position:
_contentOverlayLeftConstraint =
[NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem: contentOverlayView
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeLeft
relatedBy: NSLayoutRelationEqual
toItem: nil
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeNotAnAttribute
multiplier: 1.0
constant: 0];
_contentOverlayTopConstraint =
[NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem: contentOverlayView
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeTop
relatedBy: NSLayoutRelationEqual
toItem: nil
attribute: NSLayoutAttributeNotAnAttribute
multiplier: 1.0
constant: 0];
[contentOverlayView addConstraints: @[_contentOverlayLeftConstraint, _contentOverlayTopConstraint]];
And updated layoutSubviews
:
-(void) layoutSubviews
{
[[self contentView] setFrame: [self bounds]];
[[self videoPreviewLayer] setFrame: [self bounds]];
const CGRect videoBounds = [self videoBounds];
[_contentOverlayWidthConstraint setConstant: CGRectGetWidth(videoBounds)];
[_contentOverlayHeightConstraint setConstant: CGRectGetHeight(videoBounds)];
[_contentOverlayLeftConstraint setConstant: CGRectGetMinX(videoBounds)];
[_contentOverlayTopConstraint setConstant: CGRectGetMinY(videoBounds)];
[super layoutSubviews];
}
Crash
But when I try to add the new constraints, I get an exception with the error:
* Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSInvalidArgumentException', reason: '* +[NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem:attribute:relatedBy:toItem:attribute:multiplier:constant:]: A constraint cannot be made that sets a location equal to a constant. Location attributes must be specified in pairs'
This I don't get at all. I can't see how I can rectify this.
Can you help?