Reputation: 948
The debug view hierarchy
is a great way to view they different layers that make up the UI
, but as far as I can't tell there is no way to see what outlet reference names the objects have. They are simply referred to as what type of object they are. For example, a button is just refered to as UIButton
rather than the name of the outlet. Yes, it's possible to see in what viewController
it resides, but it' not foolprof and it can still be very hard to track down certain objects.
So, is there a way to see what the reference outlets of the objects are called?
Upvotes: 7
Views: 2970
Reputation: 1
Here's a trick that can help you figure out the view in question You can rely on the memory address of the view
print the description of the view / or find the memory address while you're in the View Hierarchy Debugger
Resume the flow ... capture the flow in any break point you have Check for the corresponding view that is allocated in this memory address
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 5152
UIView.accessibilityIdentifier
does that trick.
For NSLayoutConstraints
, its description in warning log (or po constraint
) contains more details after set UIView.accessibilityIdentifer
.
Before set accessibilityIdentifier
, it's something like
<NSLayoutConstraint: 0x6000037766c0 UILayoutGuide: 0x600002d6c620'UIViewSafeAreaLayoutGuide'.trailing == UILabel: 0x7fee70712780.trailing + 132 (active)>
After set accessiblityIdentifier
,
<NSLayoutConstraint:0x6000037766c0 UILayoutGuide:0x600002d6c620'UIViewSafeAreaLayoutGuide'.trailing == First-ID.trailing + 132 (active, names: First-ID:0x7fee70712780 )>
For view debugger, you can check accessibilityIdentifier
as follows
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 2032
No, there is not (unfortunately).
The information is not maintained at runtime to my knowledge, so you also won't be able to use lldb from Xcode's console to figure it out.
Probably worth a feature request to Apple! https://feedbackassistant.apple.com/
Upvotes: 5