Change title of MFMailComposeViewController

Sindre Sorhus picture Sindre Sorhus · Nov 15, 2009 · Viewed 13k times · Source

I'm using MFMailComposeViewController for in-app email in my app, but I'm not able to change the title. As default it's showing the subject in the title, but I would like to set the title to be something else. How can I do that?

I've tried:

controller.title = @"Feedback";

but it didn't work.

Here's my code:

- (IBAction)email {
    NSArray *array = [[NSArray alloc] initWithObjects:@"[email protected]", nil];
    MFMailComposeViewController *controller = [[MFMailComposeViewController alloc] init];
    [[controller navigationBar] setTintColor:[UIColor colorWithRed:0.36 green:0.09 blue:0.39 alpha:1.00]];
    controller.mailComposeDelegate = self;
    controller.title = @"Feedback";
    [controller setSubject:@"Long subject"];
    [controller setMessageBody:@""
                        isHTML:NO];
    [controller setToRecipients:array];
    [self presentModalViewController:controller animated:YES];
    [controller release];
    [array release];
}

- (void)mailComposeController:(MFMailComposeViewController *)controller didFinishWithResult:(MFMailComposeResult)result error:(NSError *)error {
    [self becomeFirstResponder];
    [self dismissModalViewControllerAnimated:YES];
}

Answer

Bryan Henry picture Bryan Henry · Nov 23, 2009

You can set a different title for your MFMailComposeViewController with a single line, like so.

...
[self presentModalViewController:controller animated:YES]; // Existing line
[[[[controller viewControllers] lastObject] navigationItem] setTitle:@"SomethingElse"];
...

However, this implementation effectively relies on undocumented features of MFMailComposeViewController. You're accessing the navigationItem of a private class (_MFMailComposeRootViewController) and changing its title to something other than the mail subject. I echo Art Gillespie's sentiment in that you should not do this and are very likely to be rejected by the Apple reviewers for doing something like this. In addition, this process could change completely in any minor point release of the iPhone OS, possibly causing crashes for your users until you can release an update to fix the behavior.

The decision is up to you, though, and if you still want to take these unrecommended steps, that is how you do it.