So I have a navigation controller in my built for iOS 7 app. The titleView is visible, as well as the back button and navigation bar its self. For some reason, the interactive pop gesture (swipe from the left edge) isn't working. Nothing happens. When I log the gesture, it is not nil. Is there anything special I have to do to enable this functionality? What could cause it not to work?
11 Answers
I have found that when using custom back buttons, the interactive pop gesture stops working (my take is that Apple cannot foresee how your custom back button will behave, so they disable the gesture).
To fix this, as other mentioned before, you can set the interactivePopGestureRecognizer.delegate
property to nil
.
In Swift, this can easily be done across your entire application by adding an extension for :UINavigationController
like this
extension UINavigationController {
override public func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
interactivePopGestureRecognizer?.delegate = nil
}
}
Updated answer
Seems like setting the delegate to nil
causes the app UI to freeze in some scenarios (eg. when the user swipes left or right on the top view controller of the navigation stack).
Because gestureRecognizerShouldBegin
delegate method cannot be handled in an extension, subclassing UINavigationController
seems like the best solution:
class NavigationController: UINavigationController, UIGestureRecognizerDelegate {
/// Custom back buttons disable the interactive pop animation
/// To enable it back we set the recognizer to `self`
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
interactivePopGestureRecognizer?.delegate = self
}
func gestureRecognizerShouldBegin(_ gestureRecognizer: UIGestureRecognizer) -> Bool {
return viewControllers.count > 1
}
}
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10This seems to work, but it turns out that under certain circumstances it freezes the app. I think it happens when the interactive pop gesture is triggered while a view controller is being pushed. A safer way would be to subclass
UINavigationController
. In the subclass set theinteractivePopGestureRecognizer.delegate
to self and prevent the interactive pop gesture from being recognized while a new view controller is pushed.– joernCommented Jul 30, 2016 at 15:57 -
Indeed, I have found that issue too, seems to affect only the top view controller of the navigation controller stack. I have updated my answer with a different solution based in subclassing. Commented Aug 1, 2016 at 22:15
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@Eneko Alonso perfect! Just as you said, if user swipes left or right and then taps a button - push view controller is glitched. Subclassing fixes the problem 100%– AlexCommented May 11, 2017 at 12:58
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@EnekoAlonso Im having a similar issue when I set the navigation bar hidden. I loose the swipe back functionality. Is there anyway you can help out with this? I posted this question for clarity: stackoverflow.com/questions/48954413/… Commented Feb 23, 2018 at 20:36
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navigationItem.leftItemsSupplementBackButton = true
this should do the trick.– nodebaseCommented Jun 15 at 3:21
Eh, looks like I just had to set the gesture delegate and implement the following:
-(BOOL)gestureRecognizer:(UIGestureRecognizer *)gestureRecognizer shouldRecognizeSimultaneouslyWithGestureRecognizer:(UIGestureRecognizer *)otherGestureRecognizer {
return YES;
}
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1Ive checked this but very creepy problem, when I have this fixed then if the user slides half way and then come back i see the next controller overlapped on the previous view controller. I see the Previous view controller and the next overlapped is transparent like transparent glass. So user happens to be locked this state. Any idea. This is something View did appear / will appear handling issue. Commented Apr 29, 2016 at 10:11
Look at this response and comments. All you have to do is set your navigation controller's interactive pop gesture recognizer's delegate to nil
:
self.navigationController.interactivePopGestureRecognizer.delegate = nil;
Setting it to a casted self to id<UIGestureRecognizerDelegate>
also works because all methods in the protocol are optional, but I think setting the delegate to nil
is more appropriate in this case.
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2
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7This "works" but shortly after causes very strange issues to the point of freezing the app (tested with iOS 8, device)– UserCommented Mar 30, 2016 at 20:29
My answer is based on Eneko's answer but uses only an extension on UINavigationController and works in Swift 5:
extension UINavigationController: UIGestureRecognizerDelegate {
override open func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
interactivePopGestureRecognizer?.delegate = self
}
public func gestureRecognizerShouldBegin(_ gestureRecognizer: UIGestureRecognizer) -> Bool {
return viewControllers.count > 1
}
}
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it is not working to me with IOS 13. Are you have any suggestion?– HinduCommented Sep 24, 2019 at 16:14
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If you feel you have tried all solutions and stretching your head then you're at the right place.
Goto simulator > Window > Enable Show Device Bezels
Now tried to simulate swipe to back gesture.
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This is so stupid, but it works! Why have Apple changed that?... Thx a bunch! Commented Jul 2, 2020 at 19:13
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You can put this line in the viewDidLoad method.
self.navigationController.interactivePopGestureRecognizer.delegate = (id<UIGestureRecognizerDelegate>)self;
Maybe someone may find this helpful.
If you want to hide the navigation bar but use normal swipe gestures to go back and other navigation controller features, you should use: (navigationBar)
self.navigationController?.navigationBar.isHidden = true
If you want to disable navigation bar (hide navigation bar, disable swipe for back) but want to push viewcontroller you should use: (isNavigationBarHidden)
self.navigationController?.isNavigationBarHidden = true
Update 7-DEC-2018:
Recommended way:
In case that your first controller use hidden navigation bar, but next childs use navigation bar, when you come back to base view controller you will see a black bar in transition in place of navigation bar. This will be fixed very easy if you use in first viewcontroller(parent):
override func viewWillAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewWillAppear(animated)
self.navigationController?.setNavigationBarHidden(true, animated: animated)
}
override func viewWillDisappear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewWillDisappear(animated)
self.navigationController?.setNavigationBarHidden(false, animated: animated)
}
The more worked out answer was both Aaron and lojals
First Customise the Navigation controller and then put this code in the class
In ViewDidload put this line:
self.navigationController.interactivePopGestureRecognizer.delegate = (id<UIGestureRecognizerDelegate>)self;
And in class write this function
-(BOOL)gestureRecognizer:(UIGestureRecognizer *)gestureRecognizer shouldRecognizeSimultaneouslyWithGestureRecognizer:(UIGestureRecognizer *)otherGestureRecognizer { return YES;}
In Swift 4, I have a UITableView inside my view controller, I solved this issue with:
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.navigationController?.interactivePopGestureRecognizer?.delegate=nil
}
Generically add interactive pop gesture to the whole app.
XCODE: 9.0, Swift: 4.0
Preferably create UINavigationController in AppDelegate.swift
- Create a navigation controller
// I created a global variable, however not necessarily you will be doing this way
var nvc: UINavigationController!
- implement
UIGestureRecognizerDelegate
class AppDelegate: UIResponder, UIApplicationDelegate, UIGestureRecognizerDelegate {
- Instantiat
UINavigationController
in application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions function
nvc=UINavigationController()
// For interactive pop gesture
nvc.navigationBar.isHidden=true
nvc?.interactivePopGestureRecognizer?.delegate=self
- Extra step, add controller to navigation controller in application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions function
window=UIWindow()
window?.rootViewController=nvc
window?.makeKeyAndVisible()
// BaseViewController is sample controller i created with xib
nvc.pushViewController(BaseViewController(), animated: true)
- Implement gusture recognizer, add below code to AppDelegate.swift
func gestureRecognizer(_ gestureRecognizer: UIGestureRecognizer, shouldRequireFailureOf otherGestureRecognizer: UIGestureRecognizer) -> Bool {
return true
}
Note: See other post in this section for the difference between
self.navigationController?.navigationBar.isHidden=true
And
self.navigationController?.isNavigationBarHidden = true
If you use custom back buttons, you have to do this:
navigationItem.leftItemsSupplementBackButton = true
That way the pop gesture recognizer is still active.
If you need more customization, you can use the solution provided by Eneko Alonso