nmh's answer is correct. I wrote up an answer earlier but his came in faster, so I thought I would take out the other parts and just add the explanations here.
You have this:
@interface allEventsDrillPage : UIViewController
{
id<allEventsDrillPageDelegate> __weak delegate;
....
}
@property (weak, nonatomic) id <allEventsDrillPageDelegate> delegate;
With this id<allEventsDrillPageDelegate> __weak delegate;
you declare an ivar.
With this @property (weak, nonatomic) id <allEventsDrillPageDelegate> delegate;
you are declaring a property.
Since Xcode 4.4 you get auto-synthesization. And so this line:
_drillPage.delegate = self;
You are setting the one via the property.
And not this:
id<allEventsDrillPageDelegate> __weak delegate;
So what you have here:
[delegate allEventsDrillPage:self backbuttonPressed:sender];
You are using the ivar above, not the one via the property.
And delegate
is thus nil.
And so, if you try to send a message to the delegate using nmh's solution or:
[self.delegate allEventsDrillPage:self backbuttonPressed:sender];
It should work as expected.
Addendum to dismissing modal view controller:
Instead of dismissing it from the current view controller, dismiss it from the one who presented it, so:
- (void)header:(header *)header backbuttonPressed:(UIButton *)sender
{
if(header == logo)
{
NSLog(@"gotBackButtonDelegate");
[_delegate allEventsDrillPage:self backbuttonPressed:sender];
//or self.delegate
}
}
And in:
- (void)allEventsDrillPage:(allEventsDrillPage *)allEventsDrillPage backbuttonPressed:(UIButton *)sender
{
NSLog(@"got back delegate!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!");
[self dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:nil];
_drillPage = nil;
}
Or even better:
- (void)allEventsDrillPage:(allEventsDrillPage *)allEventsDrillPage backbuttonPressed:(UIButton *)sender
{
NSLog(@"got back delegate!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!");
[self dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:^{
_drillPage = nil;
}];
}
Hope this helps.