I have a UINavigationController as the root view controller of my UIWindow on iOS 7 and iOS 8. From one of its view controllers, I present a fullscreen modal view controller with a cross-dissolve presentation style. This modal view controller should be able to rotate to all orientations, and it works fine.
The problem is when the device is held in a landscape orientation and the modal view controller is dismissed. The view controller which presented the modal only supports portrait orientation, and I've confirmed that UIInterfaceOrientationMaskPortrait is returned to -application:supportedInterfaceOrientationsForWindow:. -shouldAutorotate returns YES, as well. However, the orientation of the presenting view controller, after dismissing the modal, remains landscape. How can I force it to remain in portrait orientation while allowing the modal to take the orientation of the device? My code follows:
App delegate:
- (NSUInteger)application:(UIApplication *)application supportedInterfaceOrientationsForWindow:(UIWindow *)window
{
if (UI_USER_INTERFACE_IDIOM() == UIUserInterfaceIdiomPhone) {
UINavigationController *navigationController = (UINavigationController *)self.deckController.centerController;
NSArray *viewControllers = [navigationController viewControllers];
UIViewController *top = [viewControllers lastObject];
if (top && [top presentedViewController]) {
UIViewController *presented = [top presentedViewController];
if ([presented respondsToSelector:@selector(isDismissing)] && ![(id)presented isDismissing]) {
top = presented;
}
}
return [top supportedInterfaceOrientations];
}
return (UIInterfaceOrientationMaskLandscapeLeft|UIInterfaceOrientationMaskLandscapeRight);
}
Presenting view controller:
- (BOOL)shouldAutorotate {
return YES;
}
- (NSUInteger)supportedInterfaceOrientations {
return UIInterfaceOrientationMaskPortrait;
}
- (UIInterfaceOrientation)preferredInterfaceOrientationForPresentation {
return UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait;
}
Modal view controller:
- (BOOL)shouldAutorotate
{
return YES;
}
- (NSUInteger)supportedInterfaceOrientations
{
return (UIInterfaceOrientationMaskLandscape|UIInterfaceOrientationMaskLandscapeLeft|UIInterfaceOrientationMaskPortrait);
}
I ended up subclassing the UINavigationController and overriding its rotation methods. The following solution works on iOS 7, but I believe there is a bug in iOS 8 beta 5 that causes the presenting view controller's view to shrink to half the screen-height after dismissing the modal in landscape orientation.
UINavigationController subclass:
This solution is for iOS 8+.
Problem description
Setup and illustration
UINavigationController's subclass:
VC1 initial appearance and UI view stack:
Presenting VC2 (QLPreviewController in that example) from VC1:
VC2 is presented and device rotated to landscape:
VC2 dismissed, device is back in portrait mode, but NC stack remains in landscape:
Cause
Apple documentation states:
Apparently there is a bug in handling UINavigationController stack.
Solution
This bug can be bypassed by providing our own transitioning delegate.
BTTransitioningDelegate.h
BTTransitioningDelegate.m
Import that transitioning delegate in presenting VC:
Store a strong reference to an instance:
Instantiate in
-viewDidLoad
:Call when appropriate:
If the modal controller was in landscape orientation before dismissal, the presenting ViewController may not return to the origin orientation (portrait). The problem is because the AppDelegate supportedInterfaceOrientationsForWindow method is called before the controller is actually dismissed and the presented controller check still returns Landscape mask.
Set a flag to indicate whether the (modal) presented view controller will be displayed or not.
And in the modal presented ViewController set the orientation according to the flag: When the modal ViewController is presented - return Landscape. When it is dismissed then return portrait
Last step - from your AppDelegate call the modal presented ViewController for its orientation. I am just checking the currently presented ViewController and call the supportedInterfaceOrientations on it
For more info check this link