4

I have a class that communicates with a web service and is used throughout the app. What I am looking for is a way to display an Error message in a UIActionSheet on top of what ever view the user is in. Is there an easy way to do this? I would like to avoid call back methods in every view if at all possible.

respectTheCode
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2 Answers2

13

If you use the code in the other answer, your app will get rejected when submitted to the app store (for using a non-public api). I found that out the hard way. A better solution is to create a category. Here is what I used to replace the code in the original solution:

@interface UIView (FindFirstResponder)
- (UIView *)findFirstResponder;
@end

And

@implementation UIView (FindFirstResponder)
- (UIView *)findFirstResponder
{
    if (self.isFirstResponder) {        
        return self;     
    }

    for (UIView *subView in self.subviews) {
        UIView *firstResponder = [subView findFirstResponder];

        if (firstResponder != nil) {
            return firstResponder;
        }
    }

    return nil;
}
@end
BadPirate
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Justin Kredible
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5

What you want to do is find the first responder of the key window I would think. You can do that like this:

UIWindow *keyWindow = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] keyWindow];
UIView   *firstResponder = [keyWindow performSelector:@selector(firstResponder)];

That should give you the view to use in your call to the UIActionSheet.

Scott Little
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    Just thought you would like to know that if you submit your app with the code above, it will get rejected for use a non-public api. It happened to me. – Justin Kredible Dec 01 '09 at 00:13