There is a hierarchy of objects that creates other objects. The object that creates the tableviewcontroller can set properties of the controller before it lets it run off into the wide world.
@spokanedude Not really - it's the app flow. The app starts, it calls the app delegate methods, it shows the mainstoryboard, and from there each view controller has a hand in creating the new objects.
Have you worked through the basic app example with storyboards and tableviews?
@Abizern ok, just to make sure I have this right... in the "prepareForSegue", I should create a new controller an pass the reference to the new controller?
Installing Windows XP 64bit on my dev machine taught me that the hard way, years ago when 64bit cpus just started becoming standard in the consumer market.
yeah. For me my hands automatically pick for me. If I have a bunch of nested calls with tons of brackets, it gets overwhelming so I start using dot notation wherever I can.
The only problem is that unlike GDB, LLDB doesn't understand dot syntax so I can't do things like po object.property
I have to do po [object property] so I may as well get in the habit.
@Pavel I think you should do some more research and maybe post the question on stack overflow. If you're still struggling, I'm sure someone would be happy to help you tomorrow if no one has answered your question by then.
If you do, I would recommend placing one just inside the prepareForSegue: method and then another one inside your if statement, just to make sure that your methods are getting called properly.
// get list of sites and place them in sArray
slSQLite *dbCode = [[slSQLite alloc] init];
[dbCode getListOfSites];
// put site data into array for display
NSLog(@"listOfSites: %d items", dbCode.listOfSites.count);
for(int i = 0; i < dbCode.listOfSites.count; i++) {
sArray *sa = [dbCode.listOfSites objectAtIndex:i]; // get an sArray object out of listOfSites
regardless, you don't need to keep creating new instances of slSQLite. you can pass the same object around. Instead of - (void)displaySites; you'd have - (void)displaySitesWithDatabase:(slSQLite *)database;.
I released my App. it work well but it has iadview that doesn't appear in iPhone, and ipad with ios version 4.3
it appear very well in iPod and iPad with 5.1 ios version, any idea to solve that, is there any setting I should set in itunes connect , my application work on ios 4.2 and latter
So line 33 would also be wrong, btw. listArray is an NS(Mutable)Array, and you set it to a sArray. but that's still farther on. Make sure slSQLite's init method is setting its listOfSites property properly
Here's the code from prepareForSegue: // Pass any objects to the view controller here, like... slSQLite *slq = [[slSQLite alloc]init]; [slq getListOfSites];
This is getting to the point where I can't be of much more help if you're unable to send me the project. You might want to ask abizern tomorrow if you can't.
@JackLawrence when you get a chance... this does nothing... source is good, nothing in the destination, which causes the crash... any ideas? [vc setListArray:slq.listOfSites];
I'm betting it's something weird with having scroll views inside scroll views. it's always been a bit buggy, so check to make sure just the outside scroll view is working by itself.