What I want to achieve:
User presses the button in the ViewController then, the color of the button placed in the container view should change its color to red.
Step by step:
prepareForSegue(_:sender:)
.segue.identifier
equals the identifier you specified in step 1.segue.destinationViewController
to your property from step 2.viewDidLoad()
method already.Example:
var containerViewController: YourContainerViewControllerClass?
let containerSegueName = "testSegue"
override func prepareForSegue(segue: UIStoryboardSegue, sender: AnyObject?) {
if segue.identifier == containerSegueName {
containerViewController = segue.destinationViewController as? YourContainerViewControllerClass
}
}
I recommend not to rely on segue.identifier
, but rather test for destination
type directly:
override func prepare(for segue: UIStoryboardSegue, sender: Any?) {
super.prepare(for: segue, sender: sender)
if let vc = segue.destination as? YourViewController {
vc.someVariable = true
}
}
This way you avoid mistakes with a misspelled segue name.
var contentViewController : UIContentViewController?
override func prepare(for segue: UIStoryboardSegue, sender: Any?) {
if segue.identifier == containerSegueName {
contentViewController = segue.destination as? UIContentViewController
}
}
Swift 3 for macOS:
// MARK: - Container View Controller
var containerViewController: ContainerViewController?
let containerSegueIdentifier = "Container Segue"
override func prepare(for segue: NSStoryboardSegue, sender: Any?) {
if segue.identifier == containerSegueIdentifier {
if let connectContainerViewController = segue.destinationController as? FormationViewController {
formationViewController = connectContainerViewController
}
}
}
Check identifier and controller class.