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Where Does A UIAlertView Live While Not Dismissed

Does anyone know in whose subview an active UIAlertView is located or how to find the thread in which it is running?

like image 673
Jim B Avatar asked Apr 26 '10 17:04

Jim B


3 Answers

If you dump the contents of the windows property and all subviews of all views you can see that the UIAlertView is in a separate window that overlays the main window. Here I have a navbar with a viewcontroller and a tableview (I removed its subviews since they're not relevent).

<UIWindow: 0x411fd50; frame = (0 0; 320 480); opaque = NO; autoresize = RM+BM; layer = <CALayer: 0x4120af0>>
: <UILayoutContainerView: 0x4123310; frame = (0 0; 320 480); autoresize = W+H; layer = <CALayer: 0x411f800>>
: | <UINavigationTransitionView: 0x4123500; frame = (0 0; 320 480); clipsToBounds = YES; autoresize = W+H; layer = <CALayer: 0x41232e0>>
: | : <UIViewControllerWrapperView: 0x4519d30; frame = (0 64; 320 416); autoresize = W+H; layer = <CALayer: 0x4519a40>>
: | : | <UITableView: 0x7808000; frame = (0 0; 320 416); clipsToBounds = YES; autoresize = W+H; layer = <CALayer: 0x45182a0>>
: | <UINavigationBar: 0x45018b0; frame = (0 20; 320 44); clipsToBounds = YES; autoresize = W; layer = <CALayer: 0x4500fe0>>
: | : <UINavigationItemView: 0x4522a20; frame = (100 8; 160 27); opaque = NO; userInteractionEnabled = NO; layer = <CALayer: 0x4526310>>
: | : <UINavigationItemButtonView: 0x45230a0; frame = (5 7; 87 30); opaque = NO; userInteractionEnabled = NO; layer = <CALayer: 0x4520260>>
<_UIAlertOverlayWindow: 0x4179b70; frame = (0 0; 320 480); opaque = NO; layer = <CALayer: 0x4188dc0>>
: <UIAlertView: 0x4194bc0; frame = (3.8 161.95; 312.4 177.1); transform = [1.1, 0, 0, 1.1, 0, 0]; opaque = NO; animations = { transform=<CABasicAnimation: 0x4191160>; opacity=<CABasicAnimation: 0x41226f0>; }; layer = <CALayer: 0x4144c30>>
: | <UILabel: 0x4177e70; frame = (12 15; 260 23); text = 'Name of Date'; clipsToBounds = YES; opaque = NO; userInteractionEnabled = NO; layer = <CALayer: 0x4179370>>
: | <UILabel: 0x418b100; frame = (12 45; 260 41); text = 'Name of the date that you...'; clipsToBounds = YES; opaque = NO; userInteractionEnabled = NO; layer = <CALayer: 0x4128450>>
: | <UIThreePartButton: 0x41942a0; frame = (11 102; 262 43); opaque = NO; tag = 1; layer = <CALayer: 0x4191f30>>

Here is the code that produces the dump. I found it useful on occasion to see what is going on when something isn't doing what I expect:

void dumpView(UIView* aView, NSString* indent) {
    if (aView) {
        NSLog(@"%@%@", indent, aView);      // dump this view

        if (aView.subviews.count > 0) {
            NSString* subIndent = [[NSString alloc] initWithFormat:@"%@%@", 
                           indent, ([indent length]/2)%2==0 ? @"| " : @": "];
            for (UIView* aSubview in aView.subviews) dumpView( aSubview, subIndent );
            [subIndent release];
        }
    }
}

void dumpWindows() {
    for (UIWindow* window in [UIApplication sharedApplication].windows) {
        dumpView(window, @"dumpView: ");
    }   
}
like image 76
progrmr Avatar answered Oct 12 '22 15:10

progrmr


The active UIAlertView lives in a separate window (_UIAlertOverlayWindow). Use .windows property to find it.

The whole UI runs in the main thread.

like image 31
kennytm Avatar answered Oct 12 '22 16:10

kennytm


From the problem that you describe with windows and timing, sounds like you should implement alertView:didDismissWithButtonIndex:. You can trigger your followup code from within that method.

EDIT: if that did not work, I'd try doing a delay to execute the FB stuff after a delay when the window is really guaranteed to be gone.

like image 23
Jaanus Avatar answered Oct 12 '22 16:10

Jaanus