Programmatically switching between tabs within Swift

回眸只為那壹抹淺笑 提交于 2019-11-27 07:44:35
codester

If your window rootViewController is UITabbarController(which is in most cases) then you can access tabbar in didFinishLaunchingWithOptions in the AppDelegate file.

func application(application: UIApplication!, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: NSDictionary!) -> Bool {
    // Override point for customization after application launch.

    if let tabBarController = self.window!.rootViewController as? UITabBarController {
        tabBarController.selectedIndex = 1
    }

    return true
}

This will open the tab with the index given (1) in selectedIndex.

If you do this in viewDidLoad of your firstViewController, you need to manage by flag or another way to keep track of the selected tab. The best place to do this in didFinishLaunchingWithOptions of your AppDelegate file or rootViewController custom class viewDidLoad.

1.Create a new class which supers UITabBarController. E.g:

class xxx: UITabBarController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
        super.viewDidLoad()
}

2.Add the following code to the function viewDidLoad():

self.selectedIndex = 1; //set the tab index you want to show here, start from 0

3.Go to storyboard, and set the Custom Class of your Tab Bar Controller to this new class. (MyVotes1 as the example in the pic)

Swift 3

You can add this code to the default view controller (index 0) in your tabBarController:

    override func viewWillAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
        _ = self.tabBarController?.selectedIndex = 1
    }

Upon load, this would automatically move the tab to the second item in the list, but also allow the user to manually go back to that view at any time.

Anorak

To expand on @codester's answer, you don't need to check and then assign, you can do it in one step:

func application(application: UIApplication!, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: NSDictionary!) -> Bool {
    // Override point for customization after application launch.

    if let tabBarController = self.window!.rootViewController as? UITabBarController {
        tabBarController.selectedIndex = 1
    }

    return true
}

The viewController has to be a child of UITabBarControllerDelegate. So you just need to add the following code on SWIFT 3

self.tabBarController?.selectedIndex = 1

In a typical application there is a UITabBarController and it embeds 3 or more UIViewController as its tabs. In such a case if you subclassed a UITabBarController as YourTabBarController then you can set the selected index simply by:

selectedIndex = 1 // Displays 2nd tab. The index starts from 0.

In case you are navigating to YourTabBarController from any other view, then in that view controller's prepare(for segue:) method you can do:

override func prepare(for segue: UIStoryboardSegue, sender: Any?) {
        // Get the new view controller using segue.destination.
        // Pass the selected object to the new view controller.
        if segue.identifier == "SegueToYourTabBarController" {
            if let destVC = segue.destination as? YourTabBarController {
                destVC.selectedIndex = 0
            }
        }

I am using this way of setting tab with Xcode 10 and Swift 4.2.

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