Ok heres how i think of it. lets say a meteorite hits a movie theater, a workaround to seeing movies is going to another movie theater. should the other theater not fix itself?
because last i checked, a UITextField in a UITableViewCell is not what i meant to change to white, i specifically put UILabel in a UITableViewCell. yes they probably use a label for the placeholder but its not what its meant
so if you use the appearance proxy and want to change all UILabels in text field cells to white, and had some text field cells that is what you are thinking?
Im not saying its self-fixing @nhgrif but That theater is going to build back up again so people can go there. I shouldn't have to fix a piece of code that apple made faulty. That means the UIAppearance is going through all subviews so wouldnt that mean if You use uiappearance to change labels it will change all text fields as well? even detail cells and all that
so that means customizing UILabel is automatically bad. It should be fixed
ok well I had the same code, but one view is 100% code and 3 others are created in a storyboard. I don't have the text fields in the storyboard just a blank cell with its subclass.
I know. they had the same code as each other. programmatically how i created the text field and how i added the text field to the cell in the storyboard
2 views, same code, one is created in a storyboard and one is created programmatically (the table view controllers). The Storyboard one had white placeholders in text fields. the VC created programmatically had gray ones
I was asking why. the issue was because I was using UIAppearance to set title labels to white. I just did the normal appearance proxy on UILabel but if it was contained in a table cell
so 1) thats strange its only working in SB views, and 2) the color of the text could not change at all, even if you use appearance you should be able to customize each individually but this was not
Max, theme is not something from Apple. If it were, it'd be capitalized, and it'd have a prefix like UI or NS or something. You're using an undeclared variable.
Maybe it's an Apple bug. MAYBE. But the problem is, that's your answer to everything. Your code isn't doing what you want--you throw up your hands and say "It's an apple bug and there's nothing I can do about it!"
I have already found a "fix". Although Even with that fix do i email apple and add it to the docs "oh ya do this max says because it fixes" no. if someone else has this issue then it is a bug and needs to be fixed
I have to customize each table cell anyways because i do more stuff i can't do with the appearance proxy so thats why i was able to remove it, but now even table cells that may not need the code will now not be themed