Question

I have a UIViewController that I am loading from inside another view controller and then adding its view to a UIScrollView.

self.statisticsController = [self.storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:@"StatisticsViewController"];
self.statisticsController.match = self.match;

[self.scrollView addSubview:self.statisticsController.view];

I've put breakpoints in the statistics view controller and viewDidLoad is being called but viewWillAppear isn't.

Is it because I'm not pushing it onto the hierarchy or something?

Was it helpful?

Solution

You should add statisticsController as a child view controller of the controller whose view you're adding it to.

self.statisticsController = [self.storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:@"StatisticsViewController"];
self.statisticsController.match = self.match;

[self.scrollView addSubview:self.statisticsController.view];
[self addChildViewController:self.statisticsController];
[self.statisticsController didMoveToParentViewController:self];

I'm not sure this will make viewDidAppear get called, but you can override didMoveToParentViewController: in the child controller, and that will be called, so you can put any code that you would have put in viewDidAppear in there.

OTHER TIPS

I encounter -viewWillAppear: not called problem again. After googling, I came here. I did some tests, and find out that the calling order of -addSubview and -addChildViewController: is important.

Case 1. will trigger -viewWillAppear: of controller, but Case 2, it WON'T call -viewWillAppear:.

Case 1:

  controller?.willMoveToParentViewController(self)

  // Call addSubview first
  self.scrollView.addSubview(controller!.view)
  self.addChildViewController(controller!)

  controller!.didMoveToParentViewController(self)

Case 2:

  controller?.willMoveToParentViewController(self)

  // Call adChildViewController first      
  self.addChildViewController(controller!)      
  self.scrollView.addSubview(controller!.view)

  controller!.didMoveToParentViewController(self)

By default, appearance callbacks are automatically forwarded to children. It's determined with shouldAutomaticallyForwardAppearanceMethods property. Check value of this propery, if it's NO and if your child viewController should appear right on container's appearance, you should notify child with following methods in container's controller life-cycle implementation:

- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated {
    [super viewWillAppear:animated];
    for (UIViewController *child in self.childViewControllers) {
        [child beginAppearanceTransition:YES animated:animated];
    }
}

- (void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated {
    [super viewDidAppear:animated];
    [self.child endAppearanceTransition];
}

- (void)viewWillDisappear:(BOOL)animated {
    [super viewWillDisappear:animated];
    for (UIViewController *child in self.childViewControllers) {
        [child beginAppearanceTransition:NO animated:animated];
    }
}

- (void)viewDidDisappear:(BOOL)animated {
    [super viewDidDisappear:animated];
    [self.child endAppearanceTransition];
}

Customizing Appearance and Rotation Callback Behavior

Fixed my problem! Hope it would be helpful.

As mentioned in another answer, the parent view controller might not call viewWillAppear etc. when shouldAutomaticallyForwardAppearanceMethods is set to false. UINavigationController and UITabBarController are known to do that. In this case, you need to call beginAppearanceTransition(_ isAppearing: Bool, animated: Bool) on the child view controller with isAppearing set to true when the view appears and vice versa.

You have to place these calls at appropriate places in your code, normally when you add and remove your child view controller.

Don't forget to call endAppearanceTransition on your child view controller when your custom transition has ended, otherwise viewDidAppear and viewDidDisappear are not called.

Per Apple (https://developer.apple.com/library/content/featuredarticles/ViewControllerPGforiPhoneOS/ImplementingaContainerViewController.html), the correct order of API calls to add a child view controller is:

[self addChildViewController:childVC];
[self.view addSubview:childVC.view];
[childVC didMoveToParentViewController:self];

But I still had the problem where viewWillAppear in the child VC was not sporadically getting called. My issue was that there was a race condition that could cause the code above to get executed before viewDidAppear in the container view controller was called. Ensuring that viewDidAppear had already been called (or deferring the addition of the child VC until it was) solved it for me.

The previous answers are correct, but in case it helps someone - if you override loadView in the child view controller, then none of the other UIViewController methods get called.

Took me some time to realize why my code wasn't running properly, until I realized that I had accidentally overridden loadView instead of viewDidLoad.

Check if your parent VC is a UINavigationViewController (or any other container). In this case the shouldAutomaticallyForwardAppearanceMethods is False and the appearance methods are not called.

I can't understand your questions and your description. My problem was similar to this only.

CustomTabBarController -> CustomUINavigationController -> RootViewcontroller

viewWillAppear of CustomUINavigationController and RootViewController are not getting called unless you switched to another tab and come back.

The solution is call super.viewWillAppear(animated: true)

override func viewWillAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
    **super.viewWillAppear(true)**
}

I struggled for more than a day for this small mistake.

View appearance methods also will not get forwarded if your view controller hasn't loaded its view. This could happen if you override loadView in your child view controller, and the view is already added to the view hierarchy.

In that case, you could do

addChild(childVC)
childVC.loadViewIfNeeded()
childVC.didMove(toParent: self)
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