Reputation: 1612
How do you know what is the current page/view displayed inside an UIPageViewController
?
I have overridden the viewDidAppear
method of my child views, so that they send an id to the parent view in their viewDidAppear
method.
However, the problem is this: i cannot reliably use that id as id for the displayed page. because if the user turns the page but halfway through decides to stop the turning and put the page back, viewDidAppear
will already have been called. (the view is visible behind the curled page).
Maybe i should only switch to a new id if the current view disappears. But I wonder if there is not a more simple way to return the view that is currently visible?
Upvotes: 94
Views: 89257
Reputation: 135548
You should manually keep track of the current page.
The delegate method pageViewController:didFinishAnimating:previousViewControllers:transitionCompleted:
will tell you when to update that variable. The last argument of the method transitionCompleted:
can tell you whether a user completed a page turn transition or not.
Then, you can get the currently presented View Controller by doing
self.viewControllers?.first
Upvotes: 113
Reputation: 4760
In swift 5 and following sirvine answer
extension InnerDetailViewController: UIPageViewControllerDelegate {
func pageViewController(_ pageViewController: UIPageViewController, didFinishAnimating finished: Bool, previousViewControllers: [UIViewController], transitionCompleted completed: Bool) {
if completed {
guard let newIndex = embeddedViewControllers.firstIndex(where: { $0 == pageViewController.viewControllers?.last }) else { return }
print(newIndex)
currentEmbeddedViewControllerIndex = newIndex
}
}
}
In this case i don't care what class of UIViewController are embedded
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 19757
How about asking for a viewController
directly from the UIPageViewController
(Swift 4 version):
fileprivate weak var currentlyPresentedVC: UIViewController?
func pageViewController(_ pageViewController: UIPageViewController, didFinishAnimating finished: Bool, previousViewControllers: [UIViewController], transitionCompleted completed: Bool) {
currentlyPresentedVC = pageViewController.viewControllers?.first
}
Or, if you just need the currently presented view controller at some point of time, simply use pageViewController.viewControllers?.first
at that time.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2975
Swift 4
No unnecessary code. 3 ways of doing it. Using UIPageViewControllerDelegate method.
func pageViewController(_ pageViewController: UIPageViewController, didFinishAnimating finished: Bool, previousViewControllers: [UIViewController], transitionCompleted completed: Bool) {
guard completed else { return }
// using content viewcontroller's index
guard let index = (pageViewController.viewControllers?.first as? ContentViewController)?.index else { return }
// using viewcontroller's view tag
guard let index = pageViewController.viewControllers?.first?.view.tag else { return }
// switch on viewcontroller
guard let vc = pageViewController.viewControllers?.first else { return }
let index: Int
switch vc {
case is FirstViewController:
index = 0
case is SecondViewController:
index = 1
default:
index = 2
}
}
Upvotes: 19
Reputation: 620
The simplest way to approach this IMHO is to use the PageControl to store the potential outcome of the transition and then revert if the transition was cancelled. This means that the page control changes as soon as the user starts swiping, which is ok by me. This requires that you have your own array of UIViewControllers (in this example called allViewControllers
)
func pageViewController(_ pageViewController: UIPageViewController, willTransitionTo pendingViewControllers: [UIViewController]) {
if let index = self.allViewControllers.index(of: pendingViewControllers[0]) {
self.pageControl.currentPage = index
}
}
func pageViewController(_ pageViewController: UIPageViewController, didFinishAnimating finished: Bool, previousViewControllers: [UIViewController], transitionCompleted completed: Bool) {
if !completed, let previousIndex = self.allViewControllers.index(of: previousViewControllers[0]) {
self.pageControl.currentPage = previousIndex
}
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 345
UIViewController *viewController = [pageViewController.viewControllers objectAtIndex:0];
NSUInteger currentIndex = [(ViewController*) viewController indexNumber];
It will return current page index. and must use this code under the delegate function of UIPageViewController (didFinishAnimating).
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 595
This is the solution I came up with:
class DefaultUIPageViewControllerDelegate: NSObject, UIPageViewControllerDelegate {
// MARK: Public values
var didTransitionToViewControllerCallback: ((UIViewController) -> Void)?
// MARK: Private values
private var viewControllerToTransitionTo: UIViewController!
// MARK: Methods
func pageViewController(
_ pageViewController: UIPageViewController,
willTransitionTo pendingViewControllers: [UIViewController]
) {
viewControllerToTransitionTo = pendingViewControllers.last!
}
func pageViewController(
_ pageViewController: UIPageViewController,
didFinishAnimating finished: Bool,
previousViewControllers: [UIViewController],
transitionCompleted completed: Bool
) {
didTransitionToViewControllerCallback?(viewControllerToTransitionTo)
}
}
Usage:
let pageViewController = UIPageViewController()
let delegate = DefaultUIPageViewControllerDelegate()
delegate.didTransitionToViewControllerCallback = {
pageViewController.title = $0.title
}
pageViewController.title = viewControllers.first?.title
pageViewController.delegate = delegate
Make sure to set the initial title
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 5762
I have a viewControllers array, that I display in the UIPageViewController.
extension MyViewController: UIPageViewControllerDataSource {
func presentationCount(for pageViewController: UIPageViewController) -> Int {
return self.viewControllers.count
}
func presentationIndex(for pageViewController: UIPageViewController) -> Int {
return self.currentPageIndex
}
}
extension MyViewController: UIPageViewControllerDelegate {
func pageViewController(_ pageViewController: UIPageViewController, didFinishAnimating finished: Bool, previousViewControllers: [UIViewController], transitionCompleted completed: Bool) {
if !completed { return }
guard let viewController = previousViewControllers.last, let index = indexOf(viewController: viewController) else {
return
}
self.currentPageIndex = index
}
fileprivate func indexOf(viewController: UIViewController) -> Int? {
let index = self.viewControllers.index(of: viewController)
return index
}
}
Important thing to note here is that the setViewControllers method of UIPageViewController does not give any delegate callback. The delegate callbacks only represent user touch actions in the UIPageViewController.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 914
Unfortunately, all above methods didn't help me. Nevertheless, I have found the solution by using tags. May be it's not the best, but it works and hope it helps someone:
- (void)pageViewController:(UIPageViewController *)pageViewController didFinishAnimating:(BOOL)finished previousViewControllers:(NSArray *)previousViewControllers transitionCompleted:(BOOL)completed
{
if (completed) {
int currentIndex = ((UIViewController *)self.pageViewController.viewControllers.firstObject).view.tag;
self.pageControl.currentPage = currentIndex;
}
}
In Swift: (thanks to @Jessy)
func pageViewController(pageViewController: UIPageViewController,
didFinishAnimating finished: Bool,
previousViewControllers: [UIViewController],
transitionCompleted completed: Bool)
{
guard completed else { return }
self.pageControl.currentPage = pageViewController.viewControllers!.first!.view.tag
}
Example: gist
Upvotes: 45
Reputation: 6940
Thank for your answer guys, i faced similar problem, had to store index. I slightly modify my code, paste it below:
- (MenuListViewController *)viewControllerAtIndex:(NSInteger)index {
if (_menues.count < 1)
return nil;
// MenuListViewController *childViewController = [MenuListViewController initWithSecondSetFakeItems];
MenuListViewController *childViewController = self.menues[index];
childViewController.index = index;
return childViewController;
}
#pragma mark - Page View Controller Data Source
- (void)pageViewController:(UIPageViewController *)pageViewController
didFinishAnimating:(BOOL)finished
previousViewControllers:(NSArray<UIViewController *> *)previousViewControllers
transitionCompleted:(BOOL)completed{
if (completed) {
NSUInteger currentIndex = ((MenuListViewController *)self.pageController.viewControllers.firstObject).index;
NSLog(@"index %lu", (unsigned long)currentIndex);
}
}
- (UIViewController *)pageViewController:(UIPageViewController *)pageViewController viewControllerBeforeViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController
{
NSUInteger index = [(MenuListViewController *)viewController index];
if (index == 0)
return nil;
index --;
return [self viewControllerAtIndex:index];
}
- (UIViewController *)pageViewController:(UIPageViewController *)pageViewController viewControllerAfterViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController
{
NSUInteger index = [(MenuListViewController *)viewController index];
index ++;
if (index == _menues.count)
return nil;
return [self viewControllerAtIndex:index];
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 13343
I've been using view.tag
for a while now, trying to keep track of the current page was too complicated.
In this code the index is stored within the tag
property of each view
and is used to fetch the next or previous VC. Using this method it's also possible to create an infinite scroll. Check out the comment in code to view this solution as well:
extension MyPageViewController: UIPageViewControllerDataSource {
func viewControllerWithIndex(var index: Int) -> UIViewController! {
let myViewController = storyboard?.instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier("MyViewController") as MyViewController
if let endIndex = records?.endIndex {
if index < 0 || index >= endIndex { return nil }
// Instead, We can normalize the index to be cyclical to create infinite scrolling
// if index < 0 { index += endIndex }
// index %= endIndex
}
myViewController.view.tag = index
myViewController.record = records?[index]
return myViewController
}
func pageViewController(pageViewController: UIPageViewController, viewControllerAfterViewController viewController: UIViewController) -> UIViewController? {
let index = viewController.view?.tag ?? 0
return viewControllerWithIndex(index + 1)
}
func pageViewController(pageViewController: UIPageViewController, viewControllerBeforeViewController viewController: UIViewController) -> UIViewController? {
let index = viewController.view?.tag ?? 0
return viewControllerWithIndex(index - 1)
}
func presentationCountForPageViewController(pageViewController: UIPageViewController) -> Int {
return records?.count ?? 0
}
func presentationIndexForPageViewController(pageViewController: UIPageViewController) -> Int {
return (pageViewController.viewControllers.first as? UIViewController)?.view.tag ?? 0
}
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 3776
Below demo code (in Swift 2) that demonstrates how this is done by implementing a simple image swiper tutorial. Comments in the code itself :
import UIKit
/*
VCTutorialImagePage represents one page show inside the UIPageViewController.
You should create this page in your interfacebuilder file:
- create a new view controller
- set its class to VCTutorialImagePage
- sets its storyboard identifier to "VCTutorialImagePage" (needed for the loadView function)
- put an imageView on it and set the contraints (I guess to top/bottom/left/right all to zero from the superview)
- connect it to the "imageView" outlet
*/
class VCTutorialImagePage : UIViewController {
//image to display, configure this in interface builder
@IBOutlet weak var imageView: UIImageView!
//index of this page
var pageIndex : Int = 0
//loads a new view via the storyboard identifier
static func loadView(pageIndex : Int, image : UIImage) -> VCTutorialImagePage {
let storyboard = UIStoryboard(name: storyBoardHome, bundle: nil)
let vc = storyboard.instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier("VCTutorialImagePage") as! VCTutorialImagePage
vc.imageView.image = image
vc.pageIndex = pageIndex
return vc
}
}
/*
VCTutorialImageSwiper takes an array of images (= its model) and displays a UIPageViewController
where each page is a VCTutorialImagePage that displays an image. It lets you swipe throught the
images and will do a round-robbin : when you swipe past the last image it will jump back to the
first one (and the other way arround).
In this process, it keeps track of the current displayed page index
*/
class VCTutorialImageSwiper: UIPageViewController, UIPageViewControllerDataSource, UIPageViewControllerDelegate {
//our model = images we are showing
let tutorialImages : [UIImage] = [UIImage(named: "image1")!, UIImage(named: "image2")!,UIImage(named: "image3")!,UIImage(named: "image4")!]
//page currently being viewed
private var currentPageIndex : Int = 0 {
didSet {
currentPageIndex=cap(currentPageIndex)
}
}
//next page index, temp var for keeping track of the current page
private var nextPageIndex : Int = 0
//Mark: - life cylce
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
//setup page vc
dataSource=self
delegate=self
setViewControllers([pageForindex(0)!], direction: .Forward, animated: false, completion: nil)
}
//Mark: - helper functions
func cap(pageIndex : Int) -> Int{
if pageIndex > (tutorialImages.count - 1) {
return 0
}
if pageIndex < 0 {
return (tutorialImages.count - 1)
}
return pageIndex
}
func carrouselJump() {
currentPageIndex++
setViewControllers([self.pageForindex(currentPageIndex)!], direction: .Forward, animated: true, completion: nil)
}
func pageForindex(pageIndex : Int) -> UIViewController? {
guard (pageIndex < tutorialImages.count) && (pageIndex>=0) else { return nil }
return VCTutorialImagePage.loadView(pageIndex, image: tutorialImages[pageIndex])
}
func indexForPage(vc : UIViewController) -> Int {
guard let vc = vc as? VCTutorialImagePage else {
preconditionFailure("VCPagImageSlidesTutorial page is not a VCTutorialImagePage")
}
return vc.pageIndex
}
//Mark: - UIPageView delegate/datasource
func pageViewController(pageViewController: UIPageViewController, viewControllerAfterViewController viewController: UIViewController) -> UIViewController? {
return pageForindex(cap(indexForPage(viewController)+1))
}
func pageViewController(pageViewController: UIPageViewController, viewControllerBeforeViewController viewController: UIViewController) -> UIViewController? {
return pageForindex(cap(indexForPage(viewController)-1))
}
func pageViewController(pageViewController: UIPageViewController, willTransitionToViewControllers pendingViewControllers: [UIViewController]) {
nextPageIndex = indexForPage(pendingViewControllers.first!)
}
func pageViewController(pageViewController: UIPageViewController, didFinishAnimating finished: Bool, previousViewControllers: [UIViewController], transitionCompleted completed: Bool) {
if !finished { return }
currentPageIndex = nextPageIndex
}
func presentationCountForPageViewController(pageViewController: UIPageViewController) -> Int {
return tutorialImages.count
}
func presentationIndexForPageViewController(pageViewController: UIPageViewController) -> Int {
return currentPageIndex
}
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 249
This works for me reliably
I have a custom UIPageController. This pageController.currentPage is updated from the displayed UIViewController in the viewWillAppear
var delegate: PageViewControllerUpdateCurrentPageNumberDelegate?
init(delegate: PageViewControllerUpdateCurrentPageNumberDelegate ){
self.delegate = delegate
super.init(nibName: nil, bundle: nil)
}
required init?(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
fatalError("init(coder:) has not been implemented")
}
override func viewWillAppear(animated: Bool) {
if delegate != nil {
self.delegate!.upateCurrentPageNumber(0) //(0) is the pageNumber corresponding to the displayed controller
}
}
//In the pageViewController
protocol PageViewControllerUpdateCurrentPageNumberDelegate {
func upateCurrentPageNumber(currentPageIndex: Int)
}
create the view display controllers initializing with the delegate
orderedViewControllers = {
return [
IntroductionFirstPageViewController(delegate: self),
IntroductionSecondPageViewController(delegate: self),
IntroductionThirdPageViewController(delegate: self)
]
}()
the function implementing the protocol
func upateCurrentPageNumber(currentPageIndex: Int){
pageControl.currentPage = currentPageIndex
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 4550
Unfortunately nothing above works for me.
I have two view controllers and when I slightly (around 20px) scroll the last view backwards it triggers the delegate:
pageViewController:didFinishAnimating:previousViewControllers:transitionCompleted:
and saying that the current page (index) is 0
which is wrong.
Using delegate inside child viewController something like:
- (void)ViewController:(id)VC didShowWithIndex:(long)page;
// and a property
@property (nonatomic) NSInteger index;
that is triggered inside viewDidAppear
like:
- (void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
...
[self.delegate ViewController:self didShowWithIndex:self.index];
}
Worked for me.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1658
As of iOS 6 I've found that the viewControllers
property of UIPageViewController constantly updates so that it will always hold the one view controller that represents the current page, and nothing else. Thus, you can access the current page by calling viewControllers[0]
(Assuming you only show one view controller at a time).
The viewController array only updates once the page "locks" into place, so if a user decides to partially reveal the next page it doesn't become the "current" page unless they complete the transition.
If you want to keep track of the "page numbers" assign your view controllers an index value as you create them through the UIPageViewController datasource methods.
So for example:
-(void)autoAdvance
{
UIViewController *currentVC = self.viewControllers[0];
NSUInteger currentIndex = [myViewControllers indexOfObject:currentVC];
if ( currentIndex >= (myViewControllers.count-1) ) return;
[self setViewControllers:@[myViewControllers[ currentIndex+1 ]]
direction:UIPageViewControllerNavigationDirectionForward
animated:YES
completion:nil];
}
-(NSInteger)presentationIndexForPageViewController:
(UIPageViewController *)pageViewController
{
// return 0;
UIViewController *currentVC = self.viewControllers[0];
NSUInteger currentIndex = [myViewControllers indexOfObject:currentVC];
return currentIndex;
}
But note the comments that this is unreliable.
Upvotes: 59
Reputation: 861
- (void)pageViewController:(UIPageViewController *)pageViewController didFinishAnimating:(BOOL)finished previousViewControllers:(NSArray *)previousViewControllers transitionCompleted:(BOOL)completed {
NSLog(@"Current Page = %@", pageViewController.viewControllers);
UIViewController *currentView = [pageViewController.viewControllers objectAtIndex:0];
if ([currentView isKindOfClass:[FirstPageViewController class]]) {
NSLog(@"First View");
}
else if([currentView isKindOfClass:[SecondPageViewController class]]) {
NSLog(@"Second View");
}
else if([currentView isKindOfClass:[ThirdViewController class]]) {
NSLog(@"Third View");
}
}
//pageViewController.viewControllers always return current visible View ViewController
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1055
The solution below worked for me.
Apple could avoid a lot of hassle by making the native UIPageViewController scroll view pagination more configurable. I had to resort to overlaying a new UIView and UIPageControl just because the native UIPageViewController pagination won't support a transparent background or repositioning within the view frame.
- (void)pageViewController:(UIPageViewController *)pvc didFinishAnimating:(BOOL)finished previousViewControllers:(NSArray *)previousViewControllers transitionCompleted:(BOOL)completed
{
if (!completed)
{
return;
}
NSUInteger currentIndex = [[self.pageViewController.viewControllers lastObject] index];
self.pageControl.currentPage = currentIndex;
}
Upvotes: 31
Reputation: 949
I first used Corey's solution but it wasn't working on iOS5 then ended up using,
- (void)pageViewController:(UIPageViewController *)pageViewController didFinishAnimating:(BOOL)finished previousViewControllers:(NSArray *)previousViewControllers transitionCompleted:(BOOL)completed{
if(completed) {
_currentViewController = [pageViewController.viewControllers lastObject];
}
}
It tried switching through different pages and it works well for now.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 25969
Building on Ole's Answer…
This is how I implemented the 4 methods to track the current page and update the page indicator to the correct index:
- (NSInteger)presentationCountForPageViewController:(UIPageViewController *)pageViewController{
return (NSInteger)[self.model count];
}
- (NSInteger)presentationIndexForPageViewController:(UIPageViewController *)pageViewController{
return (NSInteger)self.currentIndex;
}
- (void)pageViewController:(UIPageViewController *)pageViewController willTransitionToViewControllers:(NSArray *)pendingViewControllers{
SJJeanViewController* controller = [pendingViewControllers firstObject];
self.nextIndex = [self indexOfViewController:controller];
}
- (void)pageViewController:(UIPageViewController *)pageViewController didFinishAnimating:(BOOL)finished previousViewControllers:(NSArray *)previousViewControllers transitionCompleted:(BOOL)completed{
if(completed){
self.currentIndex = self.nextIndex;
}
self.nextIndex = 0;
}
Upvotes: 35
Reputation: 4395
I am keeping track of the page index by using a small function and specifying pageIndex as static NSInteger.
-(void) setPageIndex
{
DataViewController *theCurrentViewController = [self.pageViewController.viewControllers objectAtIndex:0];
pageIndex = [self.modelController indexOfViewController:theCurrentViewController];
}
and calling [self setPageIndex];
inside the function specified by Ole and also after detecting the change in orientation.
Upvotes: 11