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Rajesh Loganathan
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You can use valueForKey: on UIStoryboards. UIStoryboards have a key called "identifierToNibNameMap", its value is an NSDictionary with the UIViewControllers in that storyboard. This inner NSDictionary uses the viewcontroller's names as keys so you can actually check if a viewcontroller exists in a storyboard with the following code:

if ([[storyboard valueForKey:@"identifierToNibNameMap"] objectForKey:myViewControllerName]) {
    // the view controller exists, instantiate it here
    UIViewController* myViewController = [storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:myViewControllerName];
} else {
    //the view controller doesn't exist, do fallback here
}

Note:Note: Apple has been known to reject apps that query the underlying properties of cocoa classes using valueForKey:. These underlying properties could change at any time in the future, breaking app functionality without warning. There is no deprecation process for these things.

You can use valueForKey: on UIStoryboards. UIStoryboards have a key called "identifierToNibNameMap", its value is an NSDictionary with the UIViewControllers in that storyboard. This inner NSDictionary uses the viewcontroller's names as keys so you can actually check if a viewcontroller exists in a storyboard with the following code:

if ([[storyboard valueForKey:@"identifierToNibNameMap"] objectForKey:myViewControllerName]) {
    // the view controller exists, instantiate it here
    UIViewController* myViewController = [storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:myViewControllerName];
} else {
    //the view controller doesn't exist, do fallback here
}

Note: Apple has been known to reject apps that query the underlying properties of cocoa classes using valueForKey:. These underlying properties could change at any time in the future, breaking app functionality without warning. There is no deprecation process for these things.

You can use valueForKey: on UIStoryboards. UIStoryboards have a key called "identifierToNibNameMap", its value is an NSDictionary with the UIViewControllers in that storyboard. This inner NSDictionary uses the viewcontroller's names as keys so you can actually check if a viewcontroller exists in a storyboard with the following code:

if ([[storyboard valueForKey:@"identifierToNibNameMap"] objectForKey:myViewControllerName]) {
    // the view controller exists, instantiate it here
    UIViewController* myViewController = [storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:myViewControllerName];
} else {
    //the view controller doesn't exist, do fallback here
}

Note: Apple has been known to reject apps that query the underlying properties of cocoa classes using valueForKey:. These underlying properties could change at any time in the future, breaking app functionality without warning. There is no deprecation process for these things.

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Kevin
  • 2.7k
  • 37
  • 62

You can use valueForKey: on UIStoryboards. UIStoryboards have a key called "identifierToNibNameMap", its value is an NSDictionary with the UIViewControllers in that storyboard. This inner NSDictionary uses the viewcontroller's names as keys so you can actually check if a viewcontroller exists in a storyboard with the following code:

if ([[storyboard valueForKey:@"identifierToNibNameMap"] objectForKey:myViewControllerName]) {
    // the view controller exists, instantiate it here
    UIViewController* myViewController = [storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:myViewControllerName];
} else {
    //the view controller doesn't exist, do fallback here
}

Note: Apple has been known to reject apps that query the underlying properties of cocoa classes using valueForKey:. These underlying properties could change at any time in the future, breaking app functionality without warning. There is no deprecation process for these things.

You can use valueForKey: on UIStoryboards. UIStoryboards have a key called "identifierToNibNameMap", its value is an NSDictionary with the UIViewControllers in that storyboard. This inner NSDictionary uses the viewcontroller's names as keys so you can actually check if a viewcontroller exists in a storyboard with the following code:

if ([[storyboard valueForKey:@"identifierToNibNameMap"] objectForKey:myViewControllerName]) {
    // the view controller exists, instantiate it here
    UIViewController* myViewController = [storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:myViewControllerName];
} else {
    //the view controller doesn't exist, do fallback here
}

Note: Apple has been known to reject apps that query the underlying properties of cocoa classes using valueForKey:.

You can use valueForKey: on UIStoryboards. UIStoryboards have a key called "identifierToNibNameMap", its value is an NSDictionary with the UIViewControllers in that storyboard. This inner NSDictionary uses the viewcontroller's names as keys so you can actually check if a viewcontroller exists in a storyboard with the following code:

if ([[storyboard valueForKey:@"identifierToNibNameMap"] objectForKey:myViewControllerName]) {
    // the view controller exists, instantiate it here
    UIViewController* myViewController = [storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:myViewControllerName];
} else {
    //the view controller doesn't exist, do fallback here
}

Note: Apple has been known to reject apps that query the underlying properties of cocoa classes using valueForKey:. These underlying properties could change at any time in the future, breaking app functionality without warning. There is no deprecation process for these things.

Source Link
Kevin
  • 2.7k
  • 37
  • 62

You can use valueForKey: on UIStoryboards. UIStoryboards have a key called "identifierToNibNameMap", its value is an NSDictionary with the UIViewControllers in that storyboard. This inner NSDictionary uses the viewcontroller's names as keys so you can actually check if a viewcontroller exists in a storyboard with the following code:

if ([[storyboard valueForKey:@"identifierToNibNameMap"] objectForKey:myViewControllerName]) {
    // the view controller exists, instantiate it here
    UIViewController* myViewController = [storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:myViewControllerName];
} else {
    //the view controller doesn't exist, do fallback here
}

Note: Apple has been known to reject apps that query the underlying properties of cocoa classes using valueForKey:.