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Prevent dismissal of UIAlertController

I am adding a UITextField to a UIAlertController, which appears as an AlertView. Before dismissing the UIAlertController, I want to validate the input of the UITextField. Based on the validation I want to dismiss the UIAlertController or not. But I have no clue how to prevent the dismissing action of the UIAlertController when a button is pressed. Has anyone solved this problem or any ideas where to start ? I went to google but no luck :/ Thanks!

like image 529
jona jürgen Avatar asked Sep 02 '14 16:09

jona jürgen


4 Answers

You're correct: if the user can tap a button in your alert, the alert will be dismissed. So you want to prevent the user from tapping the button! It's all just a matter of disabling your UIAlertAction buttons. If an alert action is disabled, the user can't tap it to dismiss.

To combine this with text field validation, use a text field delegate method or action method (configured in the text field's configuration handler when you create it) to enable/disable the UIAlertActions appropriately depending on what text has (or hasn't) been entered.

Here's an example. We created the text field like this:

alert.addTextFieldWithConfigurationHandler {
    (tf:UITextField!) in
    tf.addTarget(self, action: "textChanged:", forControlEvents: .EditingChanged)
}

We have a Cancel action and an OK action, and we brought the OK action into the world disabled:

(alert.actions[1] as UIAlertAction).enabled = false

Subsequently, the user can't tap OK unless there is some actual text in the text field:

func textChanged(sender:AnyObject) {
    let tf = sender as UITextField
    var resp : UIResponder = tf
    while !(resp is UIAlertController) { resp = resp.nextResponder() }
    let alert = resp as UIAlertController
    (alert.actions[1] as UIAlertAction).enabled = (tf.text != "")
}

EDIT Here's the current (Swift 3.0.1 and later) version of the above code:

alert.addTextField { tf in
    tf.addTarget(self, action: #selector(self.textChanged), for: .editingChanged)
}

and

alert.actions[1].isEnabled = false

and

@objc func textChanged(_ sender: Any) {
    let tf = sender as! UITextField
    var resp : UIResponder! = tf
    while !(resp is UIAlertController) { resp = resp.next }
    let alert = resp as! UIAlertController
    alert.actions[1].isEnabled = (tf.text != "")
}
like image 153
matt Avatar answered Nov 07 '22 13:11

matt


I've simplified matt's answer without the view hierarcy traversing. This is holding the action itself as a weak variable instead. This is a fully working example:

weak var actionToEnable : UIAlertAction?

func showAlert()
{
    let titleStr = "title"
    let messageStr = "message"

    let alert = UIAlertController(title: titleStr, message: messageStr, preferredStyle: UIAlertControllerStyle.Alert)

    let placeholderStr =  "placeholder"

    alert.addTextFieldWithConfigurationHandler({(textField: UITextField) in
        textField.placeholder = placeholderStr
        textField.addTarget(self, action: "textChanged:", forControlEvents: .EditingChanged)
    })

    let cancel = UIAlertAction(title: "Cancel", style: UIAlertActionStyle.Cancel, handler: { (_) -> Void in

    })

    let action = UIAlertAction(title: "Ok", style: UIAlertActionStyle.Default, handler: { (_) -> Void in
        let textfield = alert.textFields!.first!

        //Do what you want with the textfield!
    })

    alert.addAction(cancel)
    alert.addAction(action)

    self.actionToEnable = action
    action.enabled = false
    self.presentViewController(alert, animated: true, completion: nil)
}

func textChanged(sender:UITextField) {
    self.actionToEnable?.enabled = (sender.text! == "Validation")
}
like image 38
ullstrm Avatar answered Nov 07 '22 11:11

ullstrm


Cribbing off of @Matt's answer, here's how I did the same thing in Obj-C

- (BOOL)textField: (UITextField*) textField shouldChangeCharactersInRange: (NSRange) range replacementString: (NSString*)string
{
    NSString *newString = [textField.text stringByReplacingCharactersInRange: range withString: string];

    // check string length
    NSInteger newLength = [newString length];
    BOOL okToChange = (newLength <= 16);    // don't allow names longer than this

    if (okToChange)
    {
        // Find our Ok button
        UIResponder *responder = textField;
        Class uiacClass = [UIAlertController class];
        while (![responder isKindOfClass: uiacClass])
        {
            responder = [responder nextResponder];
        }
        UIAlertController *alert = (UIAlertController*) responder;
        UIAlertAction *okAction  = [alert.actions objectAtIndex: 0];

        // Dis/enable Ok button based on same-name
        BOOL duplicateName = NO;
        // <check for duplicates, here>

        okAction.enabled = !duplicateName;
    }


    return (okToChange);
}
like image 34
Olie Avatar answered Nov 07 '22 13:11

Olie


I realise that this is in Objectiv-C but it shows the principal. I will update this with a swift version later.

You could also do the same using a block as the target.

Add a property to your ViewController so that the block (closure for swift) has a strong reference

@property (strong, nonatomic) id textValidationBlock;

Then create the AlertViewController like so:

UIAlertController *alertController = [UIAlertController alertControllerWithTitle:@"Title" message:@"Message" preferredStyle:UIAlertControllerStyleAlert];
UIAlertAction *cancelAction = [UIAlertAction actionWithTitle:@"Cancel" style:UIAlertActionStyleCancel handler:^(UIAlertAction * _Nonnull action) {

}];

   __weak typeof(self) weakSelf = self;
UIAlertAction *okAction = [UIAlertAction actionWithTitle:@"Ok" style:UIAlertActionStyleDefault handler:^(UIAlertAction * _Nonnull action) {
        [weakSelf doSomething];

}];
[alertController addAction:cancelAction];
[alertController addAction:okAction];
[alertController.actions lastObject].enabled = NO;
self.textValidationBlock = [^{
    UITextField *textField = [alertController.textFields firstObject];
    if (something) {
        alertController.message = @"Warning message";
        [alertController.actions lastObject].enabled = NO;
    } else if (somethingElse) {
        alertController.message = @"Another warning message";
        [alertController.actions lastObject].enabled = NO;
    } else {
        //Validation passed
        alertController.message = @"";
        [alertController.actions lastObject].enabled = YES;
    }

} copy];
[alertController addTextFieldWithConfigurationHandler:^(UITextField * _Nonnull textField) {
    textField.placeholder = @"placeholder here";
    [textField addTarget:weakSelf.textValidationBlock action:@selector(invoke) forControlEvents:UIControlEventEditingChanged];
}];
[self presentViewController:alertController animated:YES completion:nil];
like image 27
Swinny89 Avatar answered Nov 07 '22 13:11

Swinny89