I've inserted a UITableViewController and it's corresponding UITableView into a simple IB document. The goal is to include the UITableView inside of a parent UIWindow (or UIView) with other "stuff" (anything really) adorning the table. Here's what that might look like in Interface Builder.
I've tried this numerous times and always get to the same place.
- Build a working subclass of UITableViewController filled with data
- Customize the UTableView and it's cells including tap targets
- Add the newly created UITableViewController into an IB document
- Drag the UITableView out of the UITableViewController and into the main UIView
- Wire up the UITableViewController to the UITableView
- Note: adding the UITableViewController in code results in the same problem
When running the app in the iPhone emulator or on a device the table displays correctly, but crashes the first time you try and interact with it. A scroll, a tap, anything crashes the app. This seems to be a delegate problem, like the UITableView doesn't know how to communicate back to the UITableViewController, but I have no idea how to correct the problem.
So far I have been able to get by by customizing the tableHeaderView to get layouts that suffice, but I'd really prefer to have the other technique work.
Best Answer
You're on the right track! Here's what you need to do:
Create a standard UIViewController subclass with its accompanying view xib.
Add a UITableView in the XIB.
Wire everything up. The view controller will be the delegate and the datasource for your table, so you must implement both protocols.
In your implementation file, add all of the necessary datasource and delegate methods needed for the tableview:
Your header file may look something like this:
MyViewController.h
That should do it!