30

Does anyone know of a good way to write an iOS 8 share extension without the MainInterface.storyboard that comes with the template?

When I delete the file or remove the NSExtensionMainStoryboard from Info.plist, the extension stops working (nothing happens when you tap on the button in the share pane). We tried replacing NSExtensionMainStoryboard with NSExtensionPrincipalClass which also didn't work.

Any ideas?

4 Answers 4

65

Figured it out!

Turns out there's a weird module naming thing going on in Swift, so you can fix it by adding an @objc name to the class:

@objc(PrincipalClassName)

class PrincipalClassName: UIViewController {
...

and then set the NSExtensionPrincipalClass key to PrincipalClassName.

2
  • Hey! Thanks, can you specify the source of where you found this? Jul 7, 2016 at 17:19
  • 1
    When using Swift, you need to specify 'NotificationContent.NotificationContentViewController` in your Info.plist's NSExtensionPrincipalClass key's value field. In here, NotificationContent is module name, and NotificationContentViewController is the only view controller class.
    – DawnSong
    Nov 8, 2018 at 7:30
26

Instead of the @objc hack, the proper way to do it in Swift is to include the module name in NSExtensionPrincipalClass, i.e.,

<key>NSExtensionPrincipalClass</key>
<string>$(PRODUCT_MODULE_NAME).ActionViewController</string>

(Documenting the error otherwise:

*** Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSInvalidArgumentException', reason: '*** -[__NSDictionaryM setObject:forKey:]: object cannot be nil (key: ...)'

Hopefully will help someone who run into this error in the future.)

Xcode 15 shows an error that is verbose and more helpful:

__extensionPrincipalClass != nil - /Library/Caches/com.apple.xbs/Sources/ExtensionFoundation_Sim/ExtensionFoundation/Source/NSExtension/NSExtensionSupport/EXConcreteExtensionContextVendor.m:109:
Unable to find NSExtensionPrincipalClass (MessagesViewController) in
extension bundle! Please verify that the extension links the required
frameworks and that the value for NSExtensionPrincipalClass is
prefixed with '$(PRODUCT_MODULE_NAME).' if the class is implemented in
Swift. Type: Fault | Timestamp: 2023-09-19 18:05:10.722854-07:00 |
Library: ExtensionFoundation | Subsystem: com.apple.extensionkit |
Category: default | TID: 0x4f172
2
  • I agree this is a better solution than the @objc directive, and also more clear. Worked for me 👍 Jan 8, 2020 at 20:30
  • Glory to you! Been looking for the reason why my code was crashing and would not have figured that one out on my own 🙏🙏🙏
    – Muvimotv
    Jun 17, 2020 at 23:30
15

Found the answers from these answers combined Answer 1 and Answer 2.

For Objective-C you will have to put the following in the info.plist of the App extension: NSExtensionPrincipalClass and make sure that it is under NSExtension Dict

So full answer should be like this , in my case ActionViewController is the App extension viewController

enter image description here

0
5

Can't add a comment but it is no longer NSPrincipalClass rather it is NSExtensionPrincipalClass

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.