Richard Stelling
Richard Stelling

Reputation: 25665

Checking if a .nib or .xib file exists

What's the best way to check if a Nib or Xib file exists before trying to load it using initWithNibName:bundle: or similar?

Upvotes: 32

Views: 11557

Answers (3)

Richard Stelling
Richard Stelling

Reputation: 25665

Macro

#define AssertFileExists(path) NSAssert([[NSFileManager defaultManager] fileExistsAtPath:path], @"Cannot find the file: %@", path)
#define AssertNibExists(file_name_string) AssertFileExists([[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:file_name_string ofType:@"nib"])

Here are a set of macros that you can call before you try an load a .xib or .nib, they will help identify missing files and spit out useful message about what exactly is missing.

Solutions

Objective-C:

if([[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:fileName ofType:@"nib"] != nil) 
{
    //file found
    ...
}

Please note, the documentation states that ofType: should be the extension of the file. However even if you are using .xib you need to pass `@"nib" or you will get a false-negative.

Swift:

guard Bundle.main.path(forResource: "FileName", ofType: "nib") != nil else {
       ...
    }

(See: touti's original answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/55919888/89035)

Upvotes: 70

touti
touti

Reputation: 1164

Solution For swift :

guard Bundle.main.path(forResource: "FileName", ofType: "nib") != nil else {
   ...
}

Upvotes: 3

Dietrich Epp
Dietrich Epp

Reputation: 213468

There are two solutions I see here.

You could just call initWithNibName:bundle: and catch an exception if it fails (I like this idea, it feels robust). You will probably want to verify that the exception is in fact a "file not found" exception rather than, say, an "out of memory" exception.

Alternatively, you could check the existence of the nib first, using NSBundle's pathForResource:ofType:, which returns nil for files that don't exist.

Upvotes: 0

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