I'm having a weird experience. I create any type of iPhone application, add a UIViewController with Xib file. I can edit the xib file with controls and see them rendered if I run. Now i'm trying to add a few IBOutlets to the controller, so I add them to the .h file, synthesize on the .m file. Then i head over to Interface Builder to connect the outlets. I drag the UILabel to the UIView, and then i try to connect the File Owner (which my custom UIViewController), but all that i can select when i try to connect to the UILabel is "view", which is obviosly wrong. So I'm not able t开发者_开发技巧o connect IBOutlets to their controls in Interface Builder.
Any ideas?
I did a combination of the things in this thread and I finally had success.
In Interface builder (not xcode)
- File->Reload All Class Files
- File->Read Class Files (select MyClass.h)
- Reconnect File's Owner by
a. Setting the Class to "MyClass"
b. Reconnecting the View to the File's Owner's View
Everything is back to normal now. Weird.
Hope this helps more than it confuses ;-)
Had the same problem.
Fixed it by double checking my File's Owner "Class" attribute on the Identity inspector.
In Interface Builder File->Read Class Files, and point it to your File's Owner's class. That fixed it for me.
Are you sure the File's Owner is correctly set to your custom UIViewController and that you've saved your .h
file after having added the IBOutlet
keyword to the instance variable and property?
Did you make sure you are defining your outlets in your .h file as the appropriate type? If you are trying to connect a text field in IB, then your .h file should look something like...
IBOutlet UITextField *MyTextField;
Make sure the type is UITextField (or UITextView, etc). If you type them as NSString or anything the is not appropriate, then you can't connect them in Interface Builder....
I had pretty much the same problem as you did. I don't know if you solved your problem yet but mine was that I changed all the classes' names, including the viewcontroller, but the file's owner's name remain unchanged. So, I double clicked File's owner -> click i in the window opened -> change the name in the Class field to the new viewcontroller name. Then it worked. Maybe you want to try it again and see if it works. Good luck.
If you failed to connect your UI controls to code via Right-click (or CTRL) -> dropped down list, there is another way. In interface builder, press & hold CTRL, drug mouse from "File's Owner" in the Main window of Interface Builder to your UI control (label, button, etc). The dpopdown list with all defined by you Outlets will be appered. Just choice needed one!
I had the same problem for the LONGEST. Changing my File's Owner "Type" to "MyClassViewController" instead of "UIViewController" in the Class identity window fixed my issue. It makes sense because as the File's owner type is UIViewController it's only going to show those properties specific to the base class. Changing the type to MyClassViewController gives access to it's outlets and all inherited instances. Hope this helps!
File->Read Class Files (select MyClass.h)
Did the job for me.
XCode -> Product -> Clean
Worked for me.
I had the same problem, and I just tried diatrevolo's suggestion: Click File, then Read Class Files, and point to your File's s Owner class.
This fixed it for me. I would +1 diatrevolo, but I don't have any reputation yet...
kills me every time, but sometimes if you just close and reopen xcode, things are fixed... Just happened to me with this exact problem...
For me the issue was that I had created a MyUITextView
extending the UITextView
and X-Code would'nt connect.
My workaround was to use UITextView
in IBOutlet temporarily to connect/link and then change to my custom view.
So I changed.
IBOutlet MyUITextView *tv;
to
IBOutlet UITextView *tv;
and then connected/ linked. Once connected, I changed my OBOutlet back to MyUITextView
IBOutlet MyUITextView *tv;
Restarting Xcode 5.1 did it for me.
I wrote out
@IBOutlet weak var title: UILabel!
in the UIViewController text file then connected from the file to the label in the storyboard, and it worked!
So I don't know exactly why it doesn't automatically make the IBOutlet connections, but i found a workaround. I had to manually add the outlets through the Library in Interface Builder for my customer view controller. If anyone finds the fix to make it automatically read from the .h file (like its supposed to), I'd be very appreciative if they posted it.
thank you
I'm a total newbie at this, and I had the same problem. I went to try diatrevolo's suggestion, and, in doing so, found out what was causing my problem. I had originally created my ViewController somewhere random in the project hierarchy, and then moved them into the classes folder. This meant that the actual files were not in the classes folder, but the project thought that they were, so IB was looking in the wrong place. I moved the actual files in to the actual classes file with Finder, and then deleted and readded them in the project. Then everything worked!
After I localized some XIB files, the views did not react to any updates made in Interface Builder. Simple solution was to delete the app from the simulator / device. The next Build&Run updated the application correctly.
This only happened while deploying the app via XCode on the simulator. Seems like XCode is trying to optimize the build and gets confused.
I was having trouble here too, and what ended up working for me was to build the app prior to opening Interface Builder. Voodoo!
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