I want to use Apples visual format language to constrain a view to the new Safe Area Layout Guide in iOS 11. However, I get an exception:
-[NSLayoutYAxisAnchor nsli_superitem]: unrecognized selector sent to instance 0x1c447ed40
//Make View Dictionary
var views: [String: Any] = ["left": self.leftContainer]
//Check swift version and add appropriate piece to the view dictionary
if #available(iOS 11, *) {
views["topGuide"] = self.view.safeAreaLayoutGuide.topAnchor
}else{
views["topGuide"] = self.topLayoutGuide
}
//Make the constraint using visual format language
let leftVertical = NSLayoutConstraint.constraints(withVisualFormat: "V:[topGuide][left]|", options: [], metrics: nil, views: views)
//Add the new constraint
self.view.addConstraints(vertical)
The reason I like visual format language is because you a can add lot of constraints with less code in some cases.
Any Ideas?
I want to use Apples visual format language to constrain a view to the new Safe Area Layout Guide
You can't. There is no access to the safe area layout guide through the visual format language. I've filed a bug on this, and I suggest you do the same.
We've extended the visual formatting language here a bit, so now you can pin against "<|" when you mean safeAreaLayoutGuide. I wish Apple did something like that.
For example, if you have the following pre iOS 11 code:
[NSLayoutConstraint activateConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint
constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"V:[_button]-(normalPadding)-|"
options:0 metrics:metrics views:views
]];
And now you want to make sure that the button sits above the safe bottom margin on iPhone X, then do this:
[NSLayoutConstraint activateConstraints:[NSLayoutConstraint
mmm_constraintsWithVisualFormat:@"V:[_button]-(normalPadding)-<|"
options:0 metrics:metrics views:views
]];
That's it. It'll anchor the button to the bottom of its superview on iOS 9 and 10, but anchor it to the bottom of its safeAreaLayoutGuide on iOS 11.
Please note that using "|>" to pin to the top won't exclude the status bar on iOS 9 and 10.
// In @interface/@implementation NSLayoutConstraint (MMMUtil)
// ...
+(NSArray<NSLayoutConstraint *> *)mmm_constraintsWithVisualFormat:(NSString *)format
options:(NSLayoutFormatOptions)opts
metrics:(NSDictionary<NSString *,id> *)metrics
views:(NSDictionary<NSString *,id> *)views
{
if ([format rangeOfString:@"<|"].location == NSNotFound && [format rangeOfString:@"|>"].location == NSNotFound ) {
// No traces of our special symbol, so do nothing special.
return [self constraintsWithVisualFormat:format options:opts metrics:metrics views:views];
}
if (![UIView instancesRespondToSelector:@selector(safeAreaLayoutGuide)]) {
// Before iOS 11 simply use the edges of the corresponding superview.
NSString *actualFormat = [format stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:@"<|" withString:@"|"];
actualFormat = [actualFormat stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:@"|>" withString:@"|"];
return [NSLayoutConstraint constraintsWithVisualFormat:actualFormat options:opts metrics:metrics views:views];
}
//
// OK, iOS 11+ time.
// For simplicity we replace our special symbols with a reference to a stub view, feed the updated format string
// to the system, and then replace every reference to our stub view with a corresponding reference to safeAreaLayoutGuide.
//
UIView *stub = [[UIView alloc] init];
static NSString * const stubKey = @"__MMMLayoutStub";
NSString *stubKeyRef = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"[%@]", stubKey];
NSDictionary *extendedViews = [@{ stubKey : stub } mmm_extendedWithDictionary:views];
NSString *actualFormat = [format stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:@"<|" withString:stubKeyRef];
actualFormat = [actualFormat stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:@"|>" withString:stubKeyRef];
NSArray *constraints = [NSLayoutConstraint constraintsWithVisualFormat:actualFormat options:opts metrics:metrics views:extendedViews];
NSMutableArray *processedConstraints = [[NSMutableArray alloc] init];
for (NSLayoutConstraint *c in constraints) {
UIView *firstView = c.firstItem;
UIView *secondView = c.secondItem;
NSLayoutConstraint *processed;
if (firstView == stub) {
if (![secondView isKindOfClass:[UIView class]]) {
NSAssert(NO, @"We only support UIView with <| and |> anchors, got %@", secondView.class);
continue;
}
processed = [self
constraintWithItem:secondView.superview.safeAreaLayoutGuide attribute:_MMMOppositeAttribute(c.firstAttribute)
relatedBy:c.relation
toItem:secondView attribute:c.secondAttribute
multiplier:c.multiplier constant:c.constant
priority:c.priority
identifier:@"MMMSafeAreaFirstItemConstraint"
];
} else if (secondView == stub && [firstView isKindOfClass:[UIView class]]) {
if (![firstView isKindOfClass:[UIView class]]) {
NSAssert(NO, @"We only support UIView with <| and |> anchors, got %@", secondView.class);
continue;
}
processed = [self
constraintWithItem:firstView attribute:c.firstAttribute
relatedBy:c.relation
toItem:firstView.superview.safeAreaLayoutGuide attribute:_MMMOppositeAttribute(c.secondAttribute)
multiplier:c.multiplier constant:c.constant
priority:c.priority
identifier:@"MMMSafeAreaSecondItemConstraint"
];
} else {
processed = c;
}
[processedConstraints addObject:processed];
}
return processedConstraints;
}
+ (instancetype)constraintWithItem:(id)view1 attribute:(NSLayoutAttribute)attr1
relatedBy:(NSLayoutRelation)relation
toItem:(id)view2 attribute:(NSLayoutAttribute)attr2
multiplier:(CGFloat)multiplier constant:(CGFloat)c
priority:(UILayoutPriority)priority
identifier:(NSString *)identifier
{
NSLayoutConstraint *result = [NSLayoutConstraint constraintWithItem:view1 attribute:attr1 relatedBy:relation toItem:view2 attribute:attr2 multiplier:multiplier constant:c];
result.priority = priority;
result.identifier = identifier;
return result;
}
// @end
static inline NSLayoutAttribute _MMMOppositeAttribute(NSLayoutAttribute a) {
switch (a) {
// TODO: support trailing/leading in the same way
case NSLayoutAttributeLeft:
return NSLayoutAttributeRight;
case NSLayoutAttributeRight:
return NSLayoutAttributeLeft;
case NSLayoutAttributeTop:
return NSLayoutAttributeBottom;
case NSLayoutAttributeBottom:
return NSLayoutAttributeTop;
// These two are special cases, we see them when align all X or Y flags are used.
case NSLayoutAttributeCenterY:
return NSLayoutAttributeCenterY;
case NSLayoutAttributeCenterX:
return NSLayoutAttributeCenterX;
// Nothing more.
default:
NSCAssert(NO, @"We don't expect other attributes here");
return a;
}
}
@interface NSDictionary (MMMUtil)
- (NSDictionary *)mmm_extendedWithDictionary:(NSDictionary *)d;
@end
@implementation NSDictionary (MMMUtil)
- (NSDictionary *)mmm_extendedWithDictionary:(NSDictionary *)d {
if (!d || [d count] == 0)
return self;
NSMutableDictionary *result = [[NSMutableDictionary alloc] initWithDictionary:self];
[result addEntriesFromDictionary:d];
return result;
}
@end
I know it's not VFL, but there is a factory class called NSLayoutAnchor
that makes creating constraints a bit more clean and concise.
For example, I was able to pin the top anchor of a UILabel to the top anchor of the safe area with one compact line:
label.topAnchor.constraint(equalTo: self.view.safeAreaLayoutGuide.topAnchor).isActive = true
Note that safeAreaLayoutGuide
requires iOS 11. For older versions, replace self.view.safeAreaLayoutGuide.topAnchor
by self.topLayoutGuide.bottomAnchor
.
Again, I know it's not VFL, but this seems to be what we have for now.