25

While there are many questions and answers about building a storyboard layout that would work both on 4" and 3.5" screen sizes, I couldn't find a suitable solution for the following scenario.

I use autolayout with ios6 (and ios7), and I don't have to support landscpae or ipad. I have a UIView with several subviews, which have to look as the mockup below. It is easy to set up autolayout constraints in the storyboard to fit either of the screen sizes. My question is - how do I make autolayout choose the correct constraints depending on the screen size at runtime?

SCREEN MOCKUPS

Note, that I DONT want to use 2 different storyboards. Doing so across my whole application would be a lot of work, and I would have to hook up all the delegates, outlets and actions on each storyboard. A change in a screen would require me to do double the work.

I have tried 2 methods to make this work on one storyboard, but I'm not satisfied with either of them.

  • Double the constraints. The larger constraint (50) has a higher priority than the lower constraint (30). The problem with this approach is that on the 3.5" screen size, autolayout may pick a just few lower priority constraints - enough to satisfy the layout - but leave some high priority constraints.

double constraints

  • Subclass NSLayoutConstraint. In this method, all the constraints in the storyboard are set to be NSDualLayoutConstraint. In in initialization code of NSDualLayoutConstraint, the constant of the constraint is changed to the value of 3_5_constant in case the runtime screen size is 3.5". this method is more deterministic, but you can't see the 3.5" layout in the interface builder preview.

enter image description here


If only interface builder constraints had a secondary constant value that would be applied when the screen size is 3.5", it would solve my problem.. So I remain with my question - how can I properly use a single storyboard to layout its subviews correctly for 4" AND 3.5" screen sizes?

8
  • I would advise you to do it programmatically in those cases!
    – Zalykr
    Oct 29, 2013 at 12:30
  • @Heliem, doing it programmatically will require him to add conditions all over his ViewControllers to choose between 3.5'' and 4.0''. There's really no difference besides all the additional code. Oct 29, 2013 at 12:41
  • @Indigon not exactly, I think he only has problems in those cases where he wants different constraints depending on screen size. If so, he could do only those programmatically
    – Zalykr
    Oct 29, 2013 at 13:39
  • @Heliem, my second proposed solution consists of changing the constants programmatically; the difference is, that in my solution the values of the alternate values are set in interface builder as runtime attributes, and the 'switcharoo' code only exists in NSLayoutConstraint What you propose is much more code (IBOutlet for every constraint in the storyboard), and less visibility) Oct 29, 2013 at 14:19
  • Have you tried combining "less-or-equal" and "greater-or-equal" constraints? For example height of the big inner view "smaller or equal to 248" and "bigger or equal to 220". Nov 19, 2013 at 12:51

4 Answers 4

6

If you want to use only one storyboard and you do not want to utilize auto layout, which would make your life a lot easier for what you've shown in your diagram, you will have to layout your views in code.

You will just need to detect if the user is running on a 4" device and layout your views accordingly.

#define IS_568_SCREEN (fabs((double)[[UIScreen mainScreen]bounds].size.height - (double)568) < DBL_EPSILON)

if (IS_568_SCREEN) {
    // Lots of code to layout for 4" devices
} else {
    // Lots of code to layout for 3.5" devices
}

However, if you were to use autolayout for this, you'd find it's going to save you a ton of time and code. Instead of having to manually layout every view in code using the solution I mentioned above, you'd simply need to update the y and height constraints depending on the device.

Considering this diagram showing what autolayout would handle for you and what you'd need to update manually, this should help paint a better picture of just how much you'll save with utilizing autolayout.

enter image description here

#define IS_568_SCREEN (fabs((double)[[UIScreen mainScreen]bounds].size.height - (double)568) < DBL_EPSILON)

if (IS_568_SCREEN) {
    self.layoutConstraintY.constant = 50.0f;
    self.layoutConstraintHeight.constant = 248.0f;
} else {
    self.layoutConstraintY.constant = 30.0f;
    self.layoutConstraintHeight.constant = 220.0f;
}
[self layoutIfNeeded];
3
  • My question was indeed about autolayout, so I'm commenting about your second suggestion - which is to edit the constraints via code. That is a suggestion that I came up with in my question. See this comment I made to another responser: stackoverflow.com/questions/19658140/… Jan 22, 2014 at 15:32
  • 1
    Thanks for such a detailed answer
    – nicktones
    Mar 16, 2014 at 22:31
  • The convoluted dance with fabs() and DBL_EPSILON is totally unnecessary. I've seen it copied around a bunch in the context of checking screen size, and it's based on a misunderstanding of the problems with floating point rounding. In this context, == is perfectly fine. (Also, you probably want to use an inequality, so that if Apple releases an even larger screen, it doesn't revert to the 3.5" layout.) Aug 12, 2014 at 19:24
2

This stackoverflow answer has solved the same problem for me.

Key is make an IBOutlet to the constraint (e.g height). Then do something like this

- (void)updateViewConstraints {
    [super updateViewConstraints];

    self.myConstraintFromIB.constant =
        [UIScreen mainScreen].bounds.size.height > 480.0f ? 200 : 100;
}
2
  • I had already suggested a better solution in my question (subclassing NSLayoutConstraint - NSDualLayoutConstraint) Apr 29, 2014 at 7:51
  • this is a bad answer, though its my own. Please understand your problem more and you will be able to solve it without doing a check like this.
    – carbonr
    Aug 12, 2014 at 21:16
1

You will need to edit your constraints programatically. You may find this question helpful for that.

You could also have two separate Storyboard files, or two viewController scenes in one storyboard file.

1
  • My second approach to the problem involves programmatically changing the constraints (by subclassing NSLayoutconstraint; And my question specifically asks for a solution with ONE storyboard. Nov 23, 2013 at 20:04
1

How about adding an extra view and including the square view inside it? The extra view should be transparent so no-one sees it. Set the constraints of the extra view to expand with the screen size and set the constraints of the square view to be centred in the extra box. Select a multiplier for the square view size relative to the extra box

1
  • What different is your suggestion than setting multiplier constraints on the square view itself? Nov 22, 2014 at 17:39

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