I am building an iOS app using the new language Swift. Now it is an HTML5 app, that displays HTML content using the UIWebView. The app has local notifications, and what i want to do is trigger a specific javascript method in the UIWebView when the app enters foreground by clicking (touching) the local notification.
I have had a look at this question, but it does not seem to solve my problem. I have also come across this question which tells me about using UIApplicationState, which is good as that would help me know the the app enters foreground from a notification. But when the app resumes and how do i invoke a method in the viewController of the view that gets displayed when the app resumes?
What i would like to do is get an instance of my ViewController and set a property in it to true. Something as follows
class FirstViewController: UIViewController,UIWebViewDelegate { var execute:Bool = false; @IBOutlet var tasksView: UIWebView! }
And in my AppDelegate i have the method
func applicationWillEnterForeground(application: UIApplication!) { let viewController = self.window!.rootViewController; let mainStoryboard: UIStoryboard = UIStoryboard(name: "Main", bundle: nil) var setViewController = mainStoryboard.instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier("FirstView") as FirstViewController setViewController.execute = true; }
so what i would like to do is when the app enters foreground again, i want to look at the execute variable and run the method as follows,
if execute{ tasksView.stringByEvaluatingJavaScriptFromString("document.getElementById('sample').click()"); }
Where should i put the code for the logic to trigger the javascript from the webview? would it be on viewDidLoad method, or one of the webView delegate methods? i have tried to put that code in the viewDidLoad method but the value of the boolean execute is set to its initial value and not the value set in the delegate when the app enters foreground.
If I want a view controller to be notified when the app is brought back to the foreground, I might just register for the UIApplication.willEnterForegroundNotification
notification (bypassing the app delegate method entirely):
class ViewController: UIViewController { private var observer: NSObjectProtocol? override func viewDidLoad() { super.viewDidLoad() observer = NotificationCenter.default.addObserver(forName: UIApplication.willEnterForegroundNotification, object: nil, queue: .main) { [unowned self] notification in // do whatever you want when the app is brought back to the foreground } } deinit { if let observer = observer { NotificationCenter.default.removeObserver(observer) } } }
Note, in the completion closure, I include [unowned self]
to avoid strong reference cycle that prevents the view controller from being deallocated if you happen to reference self
inside the block (which you presumably will need to do if you're going to be updating a class variable or do practically anything interesting).
Also note that I remove the observer even though a casual reading of the removeObserver
documentation might lead one to conclude is unnecessary:
If your app targets iOS 9.0 and later or macOS 10.11 and later, you don't need to unregister an observer in its dealloc method.
But, when using this block-based rendition, you really do need to remove the notification center observer. As the documentation for addObserver(forName:object:queue:using:)
says:
To unregister observations, you pass the object returned by this method to
removeObserver(_:)
. You must invokeremoveObserver(_:)
orremoveObserver(_:name:object:)
before any object specified byaddObserver(forName:object:queue:using:)
is deallocated.
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