I've been tracking along with an iPad app using storyboards, and I've been stuck on this for days. How can I initiate a popover segue by selecting a cell in a collection view? The main problem is getting past the error that the popover must be anchored to a view.
The approach seems to be putting a dummy popoverAnchorButton
(hidden, disabled) in the view, create a segue from it to the popover view in the storyboard, position it in didSelectItemAtIndexPath
, and then [self performSegue]
. Code looks like this:
- (IBAction)collectionView:(UICollectionView *)collectionView didSelectItemAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath
[self.collectionView deselectItemAtIndexPath:indexPath animated:NO];
UICollectionViewCell *cell = [self.collectionView cellForItemAtIndexPath:indexPath];
CGRect anchorRect = CGRectMake(cell.center.x, cell.center.y, 1.0f, 1.0f);
self.popoverAnchorButton.frame = anchorRect;
[self performSegueWithIdentifier:@"popoverSegue" sender:self];
}
This works elsewhere in the app in a table view, because the storyboard lets me drop a button in the view, to use as an anchor point. But Xcode doesn't let me drop a button or any other suitable view into the collection view in the storyboard, so I can't create the segue. Creating the button programmatically is no help, because I can't build a UIStoryboardSegue from it, and any manual segue from the controller gives the same error about lacking an anchor point. Any ideas?
I think another path could be to skip segues and instantiate the popover view controller programmatically, but the roadblock here is an error stemming from the fact that the popover view I create (since I'm using storyboards) has no xib. Do I have to create a separate xib file just for this popover view? Is that the only option?
If you are interested in getting the
CGRect
of the currently selected cell in the collection view you might use:And after that you can display your popover from that
rect
usingpresentPopoverFromRect:inView:permittedArrowDirections:animated:
of your UIPopoverController.And yes, you can always dynamically load a VC from your storyboard if it has a storyboard identifier associated to it:
In case you are calling the code from a VC loaded from storyboard itself, instead you can use:
Happy coding!