4

I have 'about' controller using Navigation Bar below status bar. For some reason I have to set the background color of View to be the same color of Navigation bar, otherwise, the background of status bar will be white. This trick works fine on other device, but not on iPhoneX's landscape view. As you see below: enter image description here

If I set the background of View to be white, there will be other issues:

1) The status bar is white. enter image description here

2) Navigation bar is not extended on landscape view enter image description here

Looks like this is an issue that I have Navigation Bar inside View as the storyboard structure shown below:

enter image description here

But I cannot seem to be able to move Navigation Bar to the same level as View. Any idea?

5 Answers 5

14

Your UINavigationBar is most likely pinned to the safeAreas of the view. There are several things to consider here:

Current setup

Currently, your view is pinned to the safe area insets of its superview. On iPhone X, that is:

  • UIEdgeInsets(top: 44, left: 0, bottom: 34, right: 0) in Portrait
  • UIEdgeInsets(top: 0, left: 44, bottom: 21, right: 44) in Landscape

So this is exactly where your view ends up:

enter image description here enter image description here

The values in safeAreaInsets.bottom don't matter here, because the navigationBar will most likely not expand that far to the bottom of its superview.



Pinning to superview

Ok, now let's pin the view to the edges of its superview instead of to the safe area inset:

enter image description here (Do that for all 3 edges, adjusting the constant to 0 if necessary)

This is what we end up with:

enter image description here enter image description here

Looking good for landscape but what's up with portrait? Notice how the bar button sits inside the status bar. Well, the layout system is doing exactly what you're telling it to do (if that were true all the time, coding for iOS would be a breeze :D). It pins the view to the very top of its superview, ignoring any layoutMargin or safeAreaInsets. For UINavigationBar however, this is not what we want. We want the content of the bar to start at any safeAreaInset.top, so that it does not interfere with the status bar, for example.



Solution

The solution is to revert the top constraint back to 'relative to safeArea'. The content of the navigationBar now looks ok. In order to expand the background of the navigationBar upwards, you set the navigationBars delegate (UINavigationBarDelegate) and provide the following implementation:

func position(for bar: UIBarPositioning) -> UIBarPosition {
  return .topAttached
}

By returning .topAttached, you tell the navigationBar to expand its background (blur view) upwards beneath the status bar.

Result:

enter image description here

Note that in general, it would be better to use UINavigationController if possible. This whole layout dance is done for you, plus adding a plain UINavigationBar to a view won't work well with large titles. They need a navigationController providing the collapse and expand logic.



Addendum

A few additional notes on this topic:

  • We do not need to consider left and right safe areas here. UINavigationBar respects these and insets its content accordingly. It does not do so for vertical insets, that's why we have to do the dance described above.
  • If you look closely, even the layout in the very last picture is not quite right. The large title is too close to the left edge. To work around this, you would have to tick Preserve Superview Margins for the navigation bar in the storyboard. Again, all these things are handled by the system for you if you simply use UINavigationController in the first place.
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4

You can use two views one for status bar and another for navigation bar and apply constraint as shown and your issue will be fixed.

Apply constraints

enter image description here

enter image description here

2

isTranslucent is set by default to true. Setting it to false will extend the navigation bar below the status bar.

navigationBar.isTranslucent = false
1

A summary and a little explanation for beginners for CodingMeSwiftly's answer:

  1. In your ViewController class in viewDidLoad method or similar you must assign a delegate (or do it in storyboard):

    navigationBar.delegate = self //where navigationBar is an IBOutlet

  2. Make extension for your ViewController class:

    extension ViewController: UINavigationBarDelegate { func position(for bar: UIBarPositioning) -> UIBarPosition { return .topAttached } }

  3. Check that on the storyboard the Navigation Bar top constrain is Safe Area.Top

It works for me.

-1

Looks like standalone Navigation Bar just does not work for this case. After change it to Navigation Item fixed the issue. To make it to be Navigation Item, I choose the existing controller (the one with Navigation Bar) and embed it into Navigation Controller via "Editor -> Embed".

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