In my app, I use a storyboard and segues, and I often pass data to the destination view controller before doing the segue, as follows:
- (void)prepareForSegue:(UIStoryboardSegue *)segue sender:(id)sender
{
if ([segue.destinationViewController respondsToSelector:@selector(setMyData:)]) {
[segue.destinationViewController performSelector:@selector(setMyData:)
withObject:myData];
}
}
It works everywhere except in one place. The selector gets called, the data gets set, but when the segue completes and the destination controller appears, it doesn't have the data I just set. After printing the view controller's id in both the source and destination view controllers, I found that the segue.destinationViewController
in the code above is a DIFFERENT instance of the view controller than the one that gets displayed. What's going on here?
[UPDATE 1]
I looked into the lifecycle of the destination view controller, and it first gets loaded during the segue execution, but AFTER I set the property on it! This means, that when I call performSelector
on it, the view controller object is not initialized! This is why the data I set doesn't stick. t don't understand why is this the case, and why this same approach works in the other parts of my app.
[UPDATE 2]
Posting the code of setMyData
by request. At first I didn't have this method at all, because locationToOpen
is a public property. I only added it to ensure it gets called and to print the debug info.
- (void)setMyData:(MyData *)myData
{
DLog(@"self: %@", (id)self);
_myData = myData;
}
segue.destinationViewController
with[[[segue destinationViewController] viewControllers] objectAtIndex:0]
and it worked fine.