RubyMotion Interface Builder support (yes, with outlets)
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'ib'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install ib
In your Rake file:
$:.unshift("/Library/RubyMotion/lib")
require 'motion/project'
# if you use bundler
require 'bundler'
Bundler.require
# if you are not using bundler
require 'rubygems'
require 'ib'
Motion::Project::App.setup do |app|
# ...
end
If you want to customize the IB::Project
instance that creates ib.xcodeproj
, you
should create an instance of IB::RakeTask
and pass it a block. That block will be handed
an instance of IB::Project
that you can modify:
IB::RakeTask.new do |project|
end
extend your class with IB module
class HelloController < UIViewController
extend IB
# define ib outlet
outlet :title, UILabel # @property IBOutlet UILabel * title;
outlet :untyped_label # @property IBOutlet id untyped_label;
# define ib outlet collection
outlet_collection :labels, UILabel # @property IBOutletCollection(UILabel) NSArray * labels;
# define ib action
def someAction sender
end
end
NOTE: If you include methods and attributes from module, you can use ib_outlet
and ib_action
to make them visible in Interface Builder
module TouchLogger
outlet :my_button, UIButton
def controlTouched sender
puts "touched"
end
end
class LogController < UIViewController
extend IB
include TouchLogger
ib_outlet :my_button
ib_action :controlTouched
end
Generate controller with folllowing command:
ib c Hello UIViewController \
--outlets scroller:UIScrollView btn_hello: \
--actions say_hello \
--accessors data_source
The generated file:
class HelloController < UIViewController
extend IB
attr_accessor :data_source
## ib outlets
outlet :scroller, UIScrollView
outlet :btn_hello
def say_hello(sender)
# TODO Implement action here
end
end
To use this feature, you will need to create a simple framework using
Objective-C. Let's call our framework "DesignableKit". We'll define just one
public class, DesignableView
, which will expose a cornerRadius
property that
we want to be able to edit in Xcode, and have the results shown at design-time.
At a minimum, we need three files:
-
Framework header, which defines version constants and includes the public headers. We'll call this
DesignableKit.h
-
At least one public header, e.g.
DesignableView.h
-
At least one implementation, e.g.
DesignableView.m
mkdir -p frameworks/DesignableKit touch frameworks/DesignableKit/DesignableKit.h touch frameworks/DesignableKit/DesignableView.h touch frameworks/DesignableKit/DesignableView.m
Add this framework to your project from the Rakefile, and add a new custom option, introduced by ib:
app.vendor_project('frameworks/DesignableKit', :static, ib: true)
That ib: true
option will be detected by ib, and that framework will be
included in the .xcodeproj that is created. So now let's write our custom view
code.
Unfortunately, we'll have to rely on objective-c for now. RubyMotion cannot yet compile Swift files (RM 2.32 at the time of this writing), and we have not yet added the ability to use a RubyMotion framework, but this should be possible!
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
FOUNDATION_EXPORT double DesignableKitVersionNumber;
FOUNDATION_EXPORT const unsigned char DesignableKitVersionString[];
// import all the public headers of your framework
#import <DesignableKit/DesignableView.h>
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
IB_DESIGNABLE
@interface DesignableView : UIView
@property (nonatomic) IBInspectable CGFloat cornerRadius;
@end
// we make sure to call [self setup] from all the designated initializers (UIViews have *two*!)
#import "DesignableView.h"
@implementation DesignableView
- (instancetype)initWithCoder:(NSCoder *)aDecoder {
if (self = [super initWithCoder:aDecoder]) {
[self setup];
}
return self;
}
- (instancetype)initWithFrame:(CGRect)frame{
if (self = [super initWithFrame:frame]) {
[self setup];
}
return self;
}
- (void)prepareForInterfaceBuilder {
self.backgroundColor = [UIColor whiteColor];
}
- (void)setup {
self.cornerRadius = 0;
}
- (void)setCornerRadius:(CGFloat)cornerRadius {
_cornerRadius = cornerRadius;
self.layer.cornerRadius = cornerRadius;
}
@end
Now open interface builder, and make your change!
rake ib
Running rake ib
will create a ib.xcodeproj in the root of your app and open XCode. You can create Storyboards or nibs, and save them in your resources
directory in order to be picked up by RubyMotion.
Everytime you make a change in your ruby files (like adding a new outlet or action method) you have to run rake ib
in order to let Interface Builder see the changes.
Tip : add ib.xcodeproj to your .gitignore
This gem parses your Ruby code and generates two Objective-c files (Stub.m and Stub.h) which are populated with the classes, methods and outlets you have defined. This is necessary for Interface Builder to bind outlets and actions to your code.
Various versions of the ib
gem are incompatible with advancing versions of Xcode. If you are not seeing your outlets and actions in Interface Builder, it's possible you have such a mismatch. Here's a way to find out if this might be true:
- Check the version of the gem by doing
gem list|grep ib
from the command line. - Compare the version listed with that in the most current gem (assuming you are using a current version of Xcode). You can find this in
lib/ib/version.ib
If you find your version of the ib
gem is not current, try bundle update ib
. If this does not resolve the problem, the conflict can be in required versions of Thor. For example, Guard requires a particular version of Thor and ib
does not specify. You may find removing Guard will allow your bundle update to bring ib
up to the current version.
Further note: If you are working on a current app and are used to creating your views programmatically, read on. If you're an Interface Builder ninja, nevermind(tm). It is important that you set your File's Owner in Interface Builder to the controller you are using. Remember, File's Owner, not View. Next, drag the
View
outlet in File's owner to the view you should have by now created. This will reduce the traffic on Google looking up "how come I can't get my nib hooked up right?" And remember, because File's Owner is the controller, you will bind all outlets and actions to File's Owner, so look there for these magic thingies.
Here is a sample app using a storyboard, by yury.
- clone it
- run
bundle
- run
rake ib
to change story board - run
rake
to run app in simulator
Note : this app was built for iOS 6.0
A sample app based on the code above. Written by malkomalko.
Here is another sample app, by hqmq.
Here is an OS X sample app by MarkVillacampa
You can play around with it in the same way as the Sample app above. This sample uses a single xib file rather than a storyboard.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request