In order to make a UIView
on top of all views like the behavior of UIAlertView
, the best way I see is by putting it in the app window, which is by adding the view to:
[[[UIApplication sharedApplication] delegate] window]
However, the downside I found is that it doesn't automatically take in rotation. In order for it to take in rotation, the best way to do is by adding the view on current AppDelegate window.navigationController
/rootViewController
, however, by doing this it will no longer be on top of everything. Let say when view is displaying and there is a modalViewController popup, the modal view will certainly cover up the view.
My question is, is it possible to add subview to the top most window and support orientation? Do I need two set of Nib file in this case? How UIAlertView
does the magic to combine the topmost & orientation support? When I look into the UIAlertView.h
, I see there is actually 2 UIWindows
, once is called originalWindow
and another called dimWindow
. Is there a place where I can find the source code for UIAlertView.m
?
Only the first subview of
UIWindow
gets told about orientation changes. (< iOS8)Your question is very similar to this one:
Multiple views in a UIWindow
As the answer there says, you can register for notifications of orientation changes and handle relayout of your 'on top' subview that way.
The best solution I've found is to create a transparent container view, add that container to the window, and place your alert inside the container. You may then register for
UIApplicationWillChangeStatusBarOrientationNotification
to receive rotation events and transform the container; this allows you to independently manipulate the frame of the alert:You can, if you really want, create an entirely new window with its
windowLevel
property set toUIWindowLevelAlert
, which will guarantee that the window remain above all other views, including the keyboard, but window management gets a littly tricky. The above solution should suffice for most needs.The problem with simply adding a view controller's view to a window is that it is not guaranteed to receive all the rotation and
view[Will|Did][Disa|A]ppear:
messages unless it is added to the view controller hierarchy viaaddChildViewController:
on the root view controller.Here is a possible solution, I am explaining in a few steps.
UIViewController
inherited class instead ofUIView
, Lets say class namedTopViewController
inherited byUIViewController
TopViewController
class which is inherited fromUIViewController
has methods responding to View Rotation Events. Rotation events can be captured now.At last you can put the
TopViewController
view on the top ofUIWindow
by using the same method that you mentioned in your question .Hope this helps.