00:07
@Neelang Two issues: 1. In btnLogin
, if the username or password are zero, you not only want to show the alert, but right after [alert show]
, you probably want to return
as there's no point in trying the SQL code if you are missing the userid or password.
2. You really don't want those lines that say:
else
{
appDelegate.username = txtUser.text;
}
You don't want to set the username
until you've confirmed the login was successful.
You want to set appDelegate.username
right after you show the "Login successful" alert. I.e. don't set username
until the login was successful.
Frankly, you probably don't want to see a "login successful" alert at all, but rather just immediately proceed to the carTypeViewController
. You'll notice that apps don't generally tell you that the login was successful anymore, but rather just proceed when successful and show alerts if not successful for any reason.
I also would not erase the userid and password fields upon an error, because the user now has no way of knowing which one they screwed up. I have a long password, and use long cryptic passwords, and it's nice to be able to see "oh, the userid is fine, so I must have messed up the password" or,
"no, the userid is clearly wrong so let me fix that, but the long cryptic password I entered might be fine, so I'll try that again, rather than going through the painful exercise of entering the password again".
Anyway, to your original question, the reason you're seeing the "login failed" after the "userid or password are missing" is because you don't have the return
after the "userid or password are missing" alert.
If you want to be more elegant, you might want to set up your view controller as a delegate for the text views, and only enable the "login" button when something has been entered in both fields. No point in letting the user tap "login" before they've entered something in both fields.
As a general UX design principle, it's better to prevent the user from being able to make certain, easily avoided mistakes than it is to show some error message when they make the mistake I could have easily prevented.
Clearly that works only with the "missing userid/password" scenario, but you'll see this is a pattern that many apps adopt.
Clearly, if the login was successful, that's when you set the appDelegate.username
field.