http://stuartkhall.com/posts/ios-7-development-tips-tricks-hacks
Unfortunately Apple didn't give access to their blur effect directly for you to use on your views. Luckily some clever people worked out you could just steal the layer from a UIToolbar. iOS-blur
If you want dark style blur set the toolbar barStyle to UIBarStyleBlack.
Setting the tint color but it's not tinting? Turns out there's another tint property called 'barTintColor';
self.navigationController.navigationBar.barTintColor = [UIColor blueColor];
With iOS 7 you need to nil out your delegates and datasources before your controllers are dealloc'd or you will have a lot of nasty 'message sent to deallocated instance' exceptions.
- (void)dealloc
{
self.tableView.delegate = nil;
self.tableView.dataSource = nil;
}
Don't you love how that transparent status bar floats over content? Yeah me either.
The standard call doesn't do the trick any more:
[[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES withAnimation:UIStatusBarAnimationFade]
Set the value UIViewControllerBasedStatusBarAppearance to YES in your Info.plist and add this to your controller:
- (BOOL)prefersStatusBarHidden
{
return YES;
}
Set the value UIViewControllerBasedStatusBarAppearance to YES in your Info.plist and override:
- (UIStatusBarStyle)preferredStatusBarStyle
{
return UIStatusBarStyleLightContent;
}
The only nice way I found to actually completely override the back button is to set the leftBarButtonItem, but then the swipe back gesture breaks. Luckily it's an easy fix when you know how:
self.navigationItem.leftBarButtonItem = [[UIBarButtonItem alloc]
initWithImage:img
style:UIBarButtonItemStylePlain
target:self
action:@selector(onBack:)];
self.navigationController.interactivePopGestureRecognizer.delegate = (id<UIGestureRecognizerDelegate>)self;
When full screen content is shown (say a video is expanded) and the user switches orientation and then closes you will often get an exception. Turns out preferredInterfaceOrientationForPresentation is now a required method.
- (UIInterfaceOrientation)preferredInterfaceOrientationForPresentation
{
return UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait;
}
Nothing new here, but useful if you want to perform something only on iOS 7:
if ([[[UIDevice currentDevice] systemVersion] floatValue] >= 7.0) {
...
}
iOS 7 offsets your scroll view 64px (20px for the status bar and 44px for the navigation bar) by default, you can disable this though:
self.automaticallyAdjustsScrollViewInsets = NO;
Check out this link.