I have used NSWindowController in projects several times, and feel like I have a (very)rough grasp of the concepts behind this important class. What I would like to do with this post is to clarify/correct my own understandings, and hopefully help other learners get that first step into understanding. It's the at-a-glance concepts, overview, and best practices that I find is most useful, and often lacking in the documentation. Here is my take on NSWindowController (questions are interspersed in bold):
window
property should always be linked to the NSWindow in InterfaceBuilder.[super initWithWindowNibName:]
, so that when you refer to [mycontroller window]
it will load the nib. Should this also be the case for the NSWC for the MainMenu.xib window, even though this is opened at startup?Use the [mycontroller showWindow:nil]
to display the associated window at the front. If you want the window to appear as a sheet, use something like:
NSWindowController* mycontroller = [[MyController alloc] init];
[NSApp beginSheet: [mycontroller window]
modalForWindow: [self window]
modalDelegate: self
didEndSelector: @selector(didEndMySheet:returnCode:contextInfo:)
contextInfo: nil];
The didEndSelector:
should be a method of the NSWC of the parent window, and can access and release 'mycontroller' with [sheet windowController]
.
- To close the window call the performClose:
method of NSWC's window.
Some Questions:
Please correct me if any of this is bad practice, or is just plain wrong. I am looking to clarify my understanding of NSWindowController, so any additions (in the form of best practices, experiences, gotchas) would be highly appreciated.
Thanks, Laurie
Window controllers are tools to load a window from a NIB file and for managing the memory of the resources allocated in the NIB. Before there where NSWindowControllers
one basically had to write the same code for every window or invent an own window controller class.
Of course they are also controllers in the Model/View/Controller sense, so they are the right place to connect the views from the window to the model objects. To do this they often need to act as the delegate or data source for a view object. So you got this part perfectly right.
Also window controllers are a tool for code reuse. It makes it easy to drop the window controller class and it’s XIB/NIB into another project and use it there.
So yes, every window from a NIB should be owned by a window controller, with one exception. Actually, this is just a guideline for good code, nothing enforces it.
MainMenu.xib
is a different thing, there you can’t use a window controller. This NIB gets loaded by NSApplication
so this has to be it’s "Files owner". There is no way to get a window controller between the NSApplication
and the NIB. It also isn’t necessary to use a window controller for memory management there, since the application object lives for the entire runtime of the program, so it doesn’t have to clean up it’s resources from the NIB when it gets deallocated.
If you really need a window controller for your main window you cannot put this in the MainMenu.xib
.
I hope this helps. There probably is a lot more to say about window controllers too