33

I'm trying to add a uiview to be on top of the keyboard always. I did it first with KeyboardWillShow/Hide, but it dosen't cover all cases and I'm trying to use inputAccesoryView. this is what I tried:

private var accessoryView = UIView(frame: CGRectZero)

class ViewController : UIViewController {

    var myView: customUIView

    override var inputAccessoryView: UIView {
        return accessoryView
    }

    override func canBecomeFirstResponder() -> Bool {
        return true
    }

    override func viewDidLoad() {
       super.viewDidLoad()
       accessoryView = myView
    }
}

I get the following error :

Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'UIViewControllerHierarchyInconsistency', reason: 'child view controller:UICompatibilityInputViewController should have parent view controller:MyViewController but requested parent is: UIInputWindowController: '

any help will be appreciated!

1

4 Answers 4

59

To get a view to stick above the keyboard, the code itself is pretty simple. The code you posted is not correct, try this (note that you must connect textField to the UITextField in your storyboard):

@IBOutlet weak var textField: UITextField!

override func viewDidLoad() {
    super.viewDidLoad()

    let customView = UIView(frame: CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: 10, height: 44))
    customView.backgroundColor = UIColor.red
    textField.inputAccessoryView = customView
}
10
  • thanks. I wrote this code in viewDidLoad() and I get an error - use of unresolved identifier 'textField'
    – user101010
    Feb 28, 2016 at 23:39
  • I clarified the answer a bit @user101010.
    – paulvs
    Feb 28, 2016 at 23:42
  • just add a random textField to my viewController in storyboard and use it?
    – user101010
    Feb 28, 2016 at 23:51
  • 1
    A keyboard can only be displayed if a UITextField or UITextView is on the screen and gains focus. So you need to connect it to whatever text fields or text views you have on screen.
    – paulvs
    Feb 29, 2016 at 0:02
  • got it. now I get exactly the same error I mentioned in my question. maybe it has something to with the fact that the textFields I want to connect to are inside a scroll view?
    – user101010
    Feb 29, 2016 at 0:26
33

Details

  • Xcode 11.2 (11B52), Swift 5

Solution

KeyboardToolbarButton

import UIKit

enum KeyboardToolbarButton: Int {

    case done = 0
    case cancel
    case back, backDisabled
    case forward, forwardDisabled

    func createButton(target: Any?, action: Selector?) -> UIBarButtonItem {
        var button: UIBarButtonItem!
        switch self {
            case .back: button = .init(title: "back", style: .plain, target: target, action: action)
            case .backDisabled:
                button = .init(title: "back", style: .plain, target: target, action: action)
                button.isEnabled = false
            case .forward: button = .init(title: "forward", style: .plain, target: target, action: action)
            case .forwardDisabled:
                button = .init(title: "forward", style: .plain, target: target, action: action)
                button.isEnabled = false
            case .done: button = .init(title: "done", style: .plain, target: target, action: action)
            case .cancel: button = .init(title: "cancel", style: .plain, target: target, action: action)
        }
        button.tag = rawValue
        return button
    }

    static func detectType(barButton: UIBarButtonItem) -> KeyboardToolbarButton? {
        return KeyboardToolbarButton(rawValue: barButton.tag)
    }
}

KeyboardToolbar

import UIKit

protocol KeyboardToolbarDelegate: class {
    func keyboardToolbar(button: UIBarButtonItem, type: KeyboardToolbarButton, isInputAccessoryViewOf textField: UITextField)
}

class KeyboardToolbar: UIToolbar {

    private weak var toolBarDelegate: KeyboardToolbarDelegate?
    private weak var textField: UITextField!

    init(for textField: UITextField, toolBarDelegate: KeyboardToolbarDelegate) {
        super.init(frame: .init(origin: .zero, size: CGSize(width: UIScreen.main.bounds.width, height: 44)))
        barStyle = .default
        isTranslucent = true
        self.textField = textField
        self.toolBarDelegate = toolBarDelegate
        textField.inputAccessoryView = self
    }

    func setup(leftButtons: [KeyboardToolbarButton], rightButtons: [KeyboardToolbarButton]) {
        let leftBarButtons = leftButtons.map {
            $0.createButton(target: self, action: #selector(buttonTapped))
        }
        let rightBarButtons = rightButtons.map {
            $0.createButton(target: self, action: #selector(buttonTapped(sender:)))
        }
        let spaceButton = UIBarButtonItem(barButtonSystemItem: .flexibleSpace, target: nil, action: nil)
        setItems(leftBarButtons + [spaceButton] + rightBarButtons, animated: false)
    }

    required init?(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) { super.init(coder: aDecoder) }
    @objc func buttonTapped(sender: UIBarButtonItem) {
        guard let type = KeyboardToolbarButton.detectType(barButton: sender) else { return }
        toolBarDelegate?.keyboardToolbar(button: sender, type: type, isInputAccessoryViewOf: textField)
    }
}

extension UITextField {
    func addKeyboardToolBar(leftButtons: [KeyboardToolbarButton],
                            rightButtons: [KeyboardToolbarButton],
                            toolBarDelegate: KeyboardToolbarDelegate) {
        let toolbar = KeyboardToolbar(for: self, toolBarDelegate: toolBarDelegate)
        toolbar.setup(leftButtons: leftButtons, rightButtons: rightButtons)
    }
}

Usage

import UIKit

class ViewController: UIViewController {

    override func viewDidLoad() {
        super.viewDidLoad()
        textField.addKeyboardToolBar(leftButtons:  [.back, .forwardDisabled], rightButtons:  [.done], toolBarDelegate: self)
    }
}

extension ViewController: KeyboardToolbarDelegate {
   func keyboardToolbar(button: UIBarButtonItem, type: KeyboardToolbarButton, isInputAccessoryViewOf textField: UITextField) {
        print("Tapped button type: \(type) | \(textField)")
    }
}

Full example of usage

import UIKit

class ViewController: UIViewController {

    override func viewDidLoad() {
        super.viewDidLoad()
        createTextField(frame: CGRect(x: 50, y: 50, width: 200, height: 40), leftButtons: [.backDisabled, .forward], rightButtons: [.cancel])
        createTextField(frame: CGRect(x: 50, y: 120, width: 200, height: 40), leftButtons: [.back, .forwardDisabled], rightButtons: [.done])
    }

    private func createTextField(frame: CGRect, leftButtons: [KeyboardToolbarButton] = [], rightButtons: [KeyboardToolbarButton] = []) {
        let textField = UITextField(frame: frame)
        textField.borderStyle = .roundedRect
        view.addSubview(textField)
        textField.addKeyboardToolBar(leftButtons: leftButtons, rightButtons: rightButtons, toolBarDelegate: self)
    }
}

extension ViewController: KeyboardToolbarDelegate {
   func keyboardToolbar(button: UIBarButtonItem, type: KeyboardToolbarButton, isInputAccessoryViewOf textField: UITextField) {
        print("Tapped button type: \(type) | \(textField)")
    }
}

Xcode 11.2 layout problem

Results

enter image description here


enter image description here


enter image description here

4
  • I fully implement your code but I'm facing with an interesting bug. As you wrote I can't tab disabled buttons but they are shown. However, I can tab enabled buttons but they are not shown. So It needs to be total opposite. Enabled buttons needs to be seen and vice-versa Mar 15, 2018 at 7:45
  • Sorry, I do not think, that I understand your problem. What functionality do you want to implement? Mar 15, 2018 at 7:53
  • I don't want to implement anything. I just face with a problem. Texts for disabled buttons are fully seen but I can't see texts of enabled buttons. When I tab enabled buttons, I can see texts which needs to be vice-versa. If I change texts with UIImage, everything works. Mar 15, 2018 at 7:54
  • This is an awesome implementation kudos!
    – anoop4real
    Jan 16, 2020 at 12:43
3

Try this.

override var inputAccessoryView: UIView? {
    get {
       return containerView
    }
}
override var canBecomeFirstResponder: Bool {
   return true
}
1
  • 1
    This answer is probably going to get collapsed due to poor formatting and no explanation. Feb 16, 2019 at 5:03
1

Changes to make to your code:

  • Give accessoryView a height
  • Delete var myView: customUIView & the entire viewDidLoad() override

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

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