however, I'm just wondering if I can do this in my
MasterCategoryListViewController, obviously without it knowing
anything about what CustomItemController ?
Yes. Why not? However, the one that will be pushed is the MasterCategoryItemViewController
, not any subclassing classes of it. So like what you've mentioned in your question, you know that btnAddTapped
can be overriden, so do it like that.
OR, you could do something a bit more interesting:
In your MasterCategoryListViewController
, have an object of MasterCategoryItemViewController
. Then in your CustomListController
, apply any subclassing MasterCategoryListViewController
class. Next, push that MasterCategoryItemViewController
object in your btnAddTapped()
Complete sample:
import UIKit
class ListVC: MasterListVC {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.title = "ListVC"
self.itemVCToBePushed = ItemVC2()
}
}
class MasterListVC: UIViewController {
var itemVCToBePushed: MasterItemVC?
lazy var button: UIButton = {
let button = UIButton(type: .custom)
button.frame = CGRect(x: 100, y: 100, width: 250.0, height: 44.0)
button.setTitle("Test", for: .normal)
button.addTarget(self, action: #selector(self.pushMe), for: .touchUpInside)
button.backgroundColor = .gray
return button
}()
@objc func pushMe() {
guard let itemVCToBePushed = self.itemVCToBePushed else { return }
self.navigationController?.pushViewController(itemVCToBePushed, animated: true)
}
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.title = "MasterListVC"
self.view.backgroundColor = .white
self.view.addSubview(self.button)
}
}
/////
class ItemVC: MasterItemVC {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.title = "ItemVC"
}
}
class ItemVC2: MasterItemVC {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.title = "ItemVC2"
}
}
class MasterItemVC: UIViewController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
self.title = "MasterItemVC"
self.view.backgroundColor = .white
}
}