671

Just started using Xcode 4.5 and I got this error in the console:

Warning: Attempt to present < finishViewController: 0x1e56e0a0 > on < ViewController: 0x1ec3e000> whose view is not in the window hierarchy!

The view is still being presented and everything in the app is working fine. Is this something new in iOS 6?

This is the code I'm using to change between views:

UIStoryboard *storyboard = self.storyboard;
finishViewController *finished = 
[storyboard instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:@"finishViewController"];

[self presentViewController:finished animated:NO completion:NULL];
9
  • 3
    I'm having the exact same issue, except trying to call presentViewController:animated:completion on a nav controller. Are you doing this in the app delegate?
    – tarnfeld
    Aug 8, 2012 at 20:43
  • No I am doing it from one view controller to another. Have you found any solutions? Aug 8, 2012 at 22:01
  • Same issue on a part of code that always worked prior to use Xcode 4.5, I'm presenting a UINavigationController, but again this always worked before. Sep 20, 2012 at 14:52
  • I have the same problem, not solved. Doing it from the app delegate, and the rootviewcontroller calling "presentViewController" beeing a UITabBarController.
    – darksider
    Sep 22, 2012 at 23:48
  • 3
    also, if calling this method before calling makeKeyAndVisible, move it after that
    – mike_haney
    Dec 18, 2012 at 6:25

38 Answers 38

1411

Where are you calling this method from? I had an issue where I was attempting to present a modal view controller within the viewDidLoad method. The solution for me was to move this call to the viewDidAppear: method.

My presumption is that the view controller's view is not in the window's view hierarchy at the point that it has been loaded (when the viewDidLoad message is sent), but it is in the window hierarchy after it has been presented (when the viewDidAppear: message is sent).


Caution

If you do make a call to presentViewController:animated:completion: in the viewDidAppear: you may run into an issue whereby the modal view controller is always being presented whenever the view controller's view appears (which makes sense!) and so the modal view controller being presented will never go away...

Maybe this isn't the best place to present the modal view controller, or perhaps some additional state needs to be kept which allows the presenting view controller to decide whether or not it should present the modal view controller immediately.

13
  • 6
    @James you are correct, the view apparently is not in the hierarchy until after viewWillAppear has been resolved and once viewDidAppear has been called. If this were my question I would accept this answer ;)
    – Matt Mc
    Sep 24, 2012 at 1:50
  • 6
    @james Thanks. Using the ViewDidAppear solved the problem for me too. Makes sense.
    – Ali
    Oct 7, 2012 at 14:42
  • 53
    I wish I could upvote this twice. I just had this problem and came to the thread to find that I had already upvoted the last time I saw this. Dec 15, 2012 at 16:50
  • 7
    Note that when you change the VC in the viewDidAppear, this causes the execution of a segue, with Animation. Causes a flash/display of the background.
    – Vincent
    Jan 5, 2013 at 10:17
  • 3
    Yes the trick is the viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated as it's correct. One more important thing you have to call the super in the method, as [super viewDidAppear:animated]; without this it's not working.
    – BootMaker
    Mar 30, 2013 at 20:56
72

Another potential cause:

I had this issue when I was accidentally presenting the same view controller twice. (Once with performSegueWithIdentifer:sender: which was called when the button was pressed, and a second time with a segue connected directly to the button).

Effectively, two segues were firing at the same time, and I got the error: Attempt to present X on Y whose view is not in the window hierarchy!

5
  • 4
    I had the same error, and your answer here helped me figure out what was going on, it was indeed this error, fixed it because of you sir, thank you, +1
    – samouray
    May 12, 2015 at 7:39
  • 1
    I deleted the old segue and connected VC to VC. Is there a way to connect the button to the storyBoard to the VC because that way just keeps erroring for me?
    – MCB
    Jul 16, 2015 at 22:25
  • I had same error, your answer solved my problem, thanks for your attention. Kind regards.
    – iamburak
    May 1, 2016 at 19:27
  • 1
    lol, accidentally I also was creating two vc's: from button and performSegue, thanks for the tip!!!
    – Borzh
    Mar 31, 2017 at 14:12
  • 1
    In my case I was calling present(viewController, animated: true, completion: nil) inside a loop.
    – Samo
    Apr 11, 2018 at 19:43
39

viewWillLayoutSubviews and viewDidLayoutSubviews (iOS 5.0+) can be used for this purpose. They are called earlier than viewDidAppear.

4
  • 4
    Still they are used also in other occasions so I think they might be called several times in a view's "lifetime".
    – Jonny
    Mar 8, 2013 at 1:46
  • It's also not what the methods are for - as the name suggests. viewDidAppear is correct. Reading up on the view lifecycle is a good idea.
    – tooluser
    Sep 1, 2013 at 6:13
  • This is the best solution. In my case, presenting in viewDidAppear causes a split second showing of the view controller before the modal is loaded, which is unacceptable.
    – TMilligan
    Nov 21, 2013 at 3:33
  • This answer worked the best for me when trying to display an alert. The alert wouldn't show when I put it into viewDidLoad and viewWillAppear.
    – Gerard G
    Jan 7, 2016 at 21:31
28

For Display any subview to main view,Please use following code

UIViewController *yourCurrentViewController = [UIApplication sharedApplication].keyWindow.rootViewController;

while (yourCurrentViewController.presentedViewController) 
{
   yourCurrentViewController = yourCurrentViewController.presentedViewController;
}

[yourCurrentViewController presentViewController:composeViewController animated:YES completion:nil];

For Dismiss any subview from main view,Please use following code

UIViewController *yourCurrentViewController = [UIApplication sharedApplication].keyWindow.rootViewController;

while (yourCurrentViewController.presentedViewController) 
{
   yourCurrentViewController = yourCurrentViewController.presentedViewController;
}

[yourCurrentViewController dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:nil];
1
  • Worked for me also
    – azizj
    Mar 8, 2017 at 14:53
19

I also encountered this problem when I tried to present a UIViewController in viewDidLoad. James Bedford's answer worked, but my app showed the background first for 1 or 2 seconds.

After some research, I've found a way to solve this using the addChildViewController.

- (void)viewDidLoad
{
    ...
    [self.view addSubview: navigationViewController.view];
    [self addChildViewController: navigationViewController];
    ...
}
4
  • 9
    I think you are missing [navigationViewController didMoveToParentViewController:self]
    – foFox
    Jul 26, 2013 at 22:54
  • 2
    I tried your code, along with foFox's suggestion, and when I go to remove it from it's parent, it won't go away. Lololol. Still stuck with no fix. Apr 20, 2016 at 1:21
  • Works in Swift3.1
    – Pokemon
    Apr 6, 2017 at 5:42
  • @sunkehappy above two lines to be used in before presentviewcontroller, but its crashed why? Apr 11, 2017 at 12:03
15

Probably, like me, you have a wrong root viewController

I want to display a ViewController in a non-UIViewController context,

So I can't use such code:

[self presentViewController:]

So, I get a UIViewController:

[[[[UIApplication sharedApplication] delegate] window] rootViewController]

For some reason (logical bug), the rootViewController is something other than expected (a normal UIViewController). Then I correct the bug, replacing rootViewController with a UINavigationController, and the problem is gone.

0
15

Swift 5 - Background Thread

If an alert controller is executed on a background thread then the "Attempt to present ... whose view is not in the window hierarchy" error may occur.

So this:

present(alert, animated: true, completion: nil)
    

Was fixed with this:

DispatchQueue.main.async { [weak self] in
    self?.present(alert, animated: true, completion: nil)
}
0
8

TL;DR You can only have 1 rootViewController and its the most recently presented one. So don't try having a viewcontroller present another viewcontroller when it's already presented one that hasn't been dismissed.

After doing some of my own testing I've come to a conclusion.

If you have a rootViewController that you want to present everything then you can run into this problem.

Here is my rootController code (open is my shortcut for presenting a viewcontroller from the root).

func open(controller:UIViewController)
{
    if (Context.ROOTWINDOW.rootViewController == nil)
    {
        Context.ROOTWINDOW.rootViewController = ROOT_VIEW_CONTROLLER
        Context.ROOTWINDOW.makeKeyAndVisible()
    }

    ROOT_VIEW_CONTROLLER.presentViewController(controller, animated: true, completion: {})
}

If I call open twice in a row (regardless of time elapsed), this will work just fine on the first open, but NOT on the second open. The second open attempt will result in the error above.

However if I close the most recently presented view then call open, it works just fine when I call open again (on another viewcontroller).

func close(controller:UIViewController)
{
    ROOT_VIEW_CONTROLLER.dismissViewControllerAnimated(true, completion: nil)
}

What I have concluded is that the rootViewController of only the MOST-RECENT-CALL is on the view Hierarchy (even if you didn't dismiss it or remove a view). I tried playing with all the loader calls (viewDidLoad, viewDidAppear, and doing delayed dispatch calls) and I have found that the only way I could get it to work is ONLY calling present from the top most view controller.

2
  • This seems like a far more common issue that the many answers that have out voted yours. Unfortunate, this was extremely helpful
    – rayepps
    Jun 19, 2018 at 6:13
  • yes all well and good but what is the solution... i have a background worker thread going to a server and displaying storyboards left right and centre and the entire methodology is bogus.. it's awful.. what should be a breeze is utterly a joke because al I want to do int he background thread is : wait wait decide push screen to front and it's IMPOSSIBLE is IOS????
    – Mr Heelis
    May 9, 2019 at 11:13
6

I had similar issue on Swift 4.2 but my view was not presented from the view cycle. I found that I had multiple segue to be presented at same time. So I used dispatchAsyncAfter.

func updateView() {

 DispatchQueue.main.asyncAfter(deadline: .now() + 0.1) { [weak self] in

// for programmatically presenting view controller 
// present(viewController, animated: true, completion: nil)

//For Story board segue. you will also have to setup prepare segue for this to work. 
 self?.performSegue(withIdentifier: "Identifier", sender: nil)
  }
}
5

My issue was I was performing the segue in UIApplicationDelegate's didFinishLaunchingWithOptions method before I called makeKeyAndVisible() on the window.

1
  • how? can you elaborate? i'm facing the same problem. this is my code let initialViewControlleripad : UIViewController = mainStoryboardIpad.instantiateViewController(withIdentifier: "SplashController") as UIViewController self.window?.rootViewController = initialViewControlleripad self.window?.makeKeyAndVisible() Sep 13, 2017 at 7:11
5

In my situation, I was not able to put mine in a class override. So, here is what I got:

let viewController = self // I had viewController passed in as a function,
                          // but otherwise you can do this


// Present the view controller
let currentViewController = UIApplication.shared.keyWindow?.rootViewController
currentViewController?.dismiss(animated: true, completion: nil)

if viewController.presentedViewController == nil {
    currentViewController?.present(alert, animated: true, completion: nil)
} else {
    viewController.present(alert, animated: true, completion: nil)
}
4

I had the same issue. The problem was, the performSegueWithIdentifier was triggered by a notification, as soon as I put the notification on the main thread the warning message was gone.

4

I've ended up with such a code that finally works to me (Swift), considering you want to display some viewController from virtually anywhere. This code will obviously crash when there is no rootViewController available, that's the open ending. It also does not include usually required switch to UI thread using

dispatch_sync(dispatch_get_main_queue(), {
    guard !NSBundle.mainBundle().bundlePath.hasSuffix(".appex") else {
       return; // skip operation when embedded to App Extension
    }

    if let delegate = UIApplication.sharedApplication().delegate {
        delegate.window!!.rootViewController?.presentViewController(viewController, animated: true, completion: { () -> Void in
            // optional completion code
        })
    }
}
3
  • BTW to understand WHERE do I call this method from... it's the otherwise UI-less SDK library, that displays its own UI over your app in certain (undisclosed) case.
    – igraczech
    Feb 22, 2016 at 17:45
  • You WILL crash and burn if anyone decides to embed you sdk in an app that has an extension. Pass a UIViewController to abuse into you sdk init method[s]. Dec 7, 2016 at 14:44
  • You're true Anton. This code was written when Extensions did not exist and SDK is not used in any of those yet. I've added a guard clause to skip this edge-case.
    – igraczech
    Dec 7, 2016 at 14:58
4

I fixed this error with storing top most viewcontroller into constant which is found within while cycle over rootViewController:

if var topController = UIApplication.shared.keyWindow?.rootViewController {
    while let presentedViewController = topController.presentedViewController {
        topController = presentedViewController
    }
    topController.present(controller, animated: false, completion: nil)
    // topController should now be your topmost view controller
}
4

You can call your segues or present, push codes inside this block:

override func viewDidLoad() {
    super.viewDidLoad()
    OperationQueue.main.addOperation {
        // push or present the page inside this block
    }
}
3

I had the same problem. I had to embed a navigation controller and present the controller through it. Below is the sample code.

- (void)viewDidLoad
{
    [super viewDidLoad];
    // Do any additional setup after loading the view, typically from a nib.

    UIImagePickerController *cameraView = [[UIImagePickerController alloc]init];
    [cameraView setSourceType:UIImagePickerControllerSourceTypeCamera];
    [cameraView setShowsCameraControls:NO];

    UIView *cameraOverlay = [[UIView alloc]initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, 768, 1024)];
    UIImageView *imageView = [[UIImageView alloc]initWithImage:[UIImage imageNamed:@"someImage"]];
    [imageView setFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, 768, 1024)];
    [cameraOverlay addSubview:imageView];

    [cameraView setCameraOverlayView:imageView];

    [self.navigationController presentViewController:cameraView animated:NO completion:nil];
//    [self presentViewController:cameraView animated:NO completion:nil]; //this will cause view is not in the window hierarchy error

}
3

If you have AVPlayer object with played video you have to pause video first.

2
3

It's working fine try this.Link

UIViewController *top = [UIApplication sharedApplication].keyWindow.rootViewController;
[top presentViewController:secondView animated:YES completion: nil];
3

In case it helps anyone, my issue was extremely silly. Totally my fault of course. A notification was triggering a method that was calling the modal. But I wasn't removing the notification correctly, so at some point, I would have more than one notification, so the modal would get called multiple times. Of course, after you call the modal once, the viewcontroller that calls it it's not longer in the view hierarchy, that's why we see this issue. My situation caused a bunch of other issue too, as you would expect.

So to summarize, whatever you're doing make sure the modal is not being called more than once.

3

This kind of warning can mean that You're trying to present new View Controller through Navigation Controller while this Navigation Controller is currently presenting another View Controller. To fix it You have to dismiss currently presented View Controller at first and on completion present the new one. Another cause of the warning can be trying to present View Controller on thread another than main.

2

I fixed it by moving the start() function inside the dismiss completion block:

self.tabBarController.dismiss(animated: false) {
  self.start()
}

Start contains two calls to self.present() one for a UINavigationController and another one for a UIImagePickerController.

That fixed it for me.

1

You can also get this warning when performing a segue from a view controller that is embedded in a container. The correct solution is to use segue from the parent of container, not from container's view controller.

1

Have to write below line.

self.searchController.definesPresentationContext = true

instead of

self.definesPresentationContext = true

in UIViewController

1

With Swift 3...

Another possible cause to this, which happened to me, was having a segue from a tableViewCell to another ViewController on the Storyboard. I also used override func prepare(for segue: UIStoryboardSegue, sender: Any?) {} when the cell was clicked.

I fixed this issue by making a segue from ViewController to ViewController.

1

I had this issue, and the root cause was subscribing to a button click handler (TouchUpInside) multiple times.

It was subscribing in ViewWillAppear, which was being called multiple times since we had added navigation to go to another controller, and then unwind back to it.

1

It happened to me that the segue in the storyboard was some kind of broken. Deleting the segue (and creating the exact same segue again) solved the issue.

1

With your main window, there will likely always be times with transitions that are incompatible with presenting an alert. In order to allow presenting alerts at any time in your application lifecycle, you should have a separate window to do the job.

/// independant window for alerts
@interface AlertWindow: UIWindow

+ (void)presentAlertWithTitle:(NSString *)title message:(NSString *)message;

@end

@implementation AlertWindow

+ (AlertWindow *)sharedInstance
{
    static AlertWindow *sharedInstance;
    static dispatch_once_t onceToken;
    dispatch_once(&onceToken, ^{
        sharedInstance = [[AlertWindow alloc] initWithFrame:UIScreen.mainScreen.bounds];
    });
    return sharedInstance;
}

+ (void)presentAlertWithTitle:(NSString *)title message:(NSString *)message
{
    // Using a separate window to solve "Warning: Attempt to present <UIAlertController> on <UIViewController> whose view is not in the window hierarchy!"
    UIWindow *shared = AlertWindow.sharedInstance;
    shared.userInteractionEnabled = YES;
    UIViewController *root = shared.rootViewController;
    UIAlertController *alert = [UIAlertController alertControllerWithTitle:title message:message preferredStyle:UIAlertControllerStyleAlert];
    alert.modalInPopover = true;
    [alert addAction:[UIAlertAction actionWithTitle:@"OK" style:UIAlertActionStyleCancel handler:^(UIAlertAction *action) {
        shared.userInteractionEnabled = NO;
        [root dismissViewControllerAnimated:YES completion:nil];
    }]];
    [root presentViewController:alert animated:YES completion:nil];
}

- (instancetype)initWithFrame:(CGRect)frame
{
    self = [super initWithFrame:frame];

    self.userInteractionEnabled = NO;
    self.windowLevel = CGFLOAT_MAX;
    self.backgroundColor = UIColor.clearColor;
    self.hidden = NO;
    self.rootViewController = UIViewController.new;

    [NSNotificationCenter.defaultCenter addObserver:self
                                           selector:@selector(bringWindowToTop:)
                                               name:UIWindowDidBecomeVisibleNotification
                                             object:nil];

    return self;
}

/// Bring AlertWindow to top when another window is being shown.
- (void)bringWindowToTop:(NSNotification *)notification {
    if (![notification.object isKindOfClass:[AlertWindow class]]) {
        self.hidden = YES;
        self.hidden = NO;
    }
}

@end

Basic usage that, by design, will always succeed:

[AlertWindow presentAlertWithTitle:@"My title" message:@"My message"];
1

Sadly, the accepted solution did not work for my case. I was trying to navigate to a new View Controller right after unwind from another View Controller.

I found a solution by using a flag to indicate which unwind segue was called.

@IBAction func unwindFromAuthenticationWithSegue(segue: UIStoryboardSegue) {
    self.shouldSegueToMainTabBar = true
}

@IBAction func unwindFromForgetPasswordWithSegue(segue: UIStoryboardSegue) {
    self.shouldSegueToLogin = true
}

Then present the wanted VC with present(_ viewControllerToPresent: UIViewController)

override func viewWillAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
    super.viewWillAppear(animated)
    let storyboard = UIStoryboard(name: "Main", bundle: nil)
    if self.shouldSegueToMainTabBar {
        let mainTabBarController = storyboard.instantiateViewController(withIdentifier: "mainTabBarVC") as! MainTabBarController
        self.present(mainTabBarController, animated: true)
        self.shouldSegueToMainTabBar = false
    }
    if self.shouldSegueToLogin {
        let loginController = storyboard.instantiateViewController(withIdentifier: "loginVC") as! LogInViewController
        self.present(loginController, animated: true)
        self.shouldSegueToLogin = false
    }
}

Basically, the above code will let me catch the unwind from login/SignUp VC and navigate to the dashboard, or catch the unwind action from forget password VC and navigate to the login page.

1

I found this bug arrived after updating Xcode, I believe to Swift 5. The problem was happening when I programatically launched a segue directly after unwinding a view controller.

The solution arrived while fixing a related bug, which is that the user was now able to unwind segues by swiping down the page. This broke the logic of my program.

It was fixed by changing the Presentation mode on all the view controllers from Automatic to Full Screen.

You can do it in the attributes panel in interface builder. Or see this answer for how to do it programatically.

1

Swift 5

I call present in viewDidLayoutSubviews as presenting in viewDidAppear causes a split second showing of the view controller before the modal is loaded which looks like an ugly glitch

make sure to check for the window existence and execute code just once

var alreadyPresentedVCOnDisplay = false

override func viewDidLayoutSubviews() {
        
    super.viewDidLayoutSubviews()
    
    // we call present in viewDidLayoutSubviews as
    // presenting in viewDidAppear causes a split second showing 
    // of the view controller before the modal is loaded
    
    guard let _ = view?.window else {
        // window must be assigned
        return
    }
    
    if !alreadyPresentedVCOnDisplay {
        alreadyPresentedVCOnDisplay = true
        present(...)
    }
    
}

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