In SwiftUI, how to use UIHostingController inside an UIView or as an UIView?
View controllers are not just for the top level scene. We often place view controllers within view controllers. It’s called “view controller containment” and/or “child view controllers”. (BTW, view controller containers are, in general, a great way to fight view controller bloat in traditional UIKit apps, breaking complicated scenes into multiple view controllers.)
So,
Go ahead and use
UIHostingController
:let controller = UIHostingController(rootView: ...)
and;
Add the view controller can then add the hosting controller as a child view controller:
addChild(controller) view.addSubview(controller.view) controller.didMove(toParent: self)
Obviously, you’d also set the
frame
or the layout constraints for the hosting controller’sview
.See the Implementing a Container View Controller section of the
UIViewController
documentation for general information about embedding one view controller within another.
For example, let’s imagine that we had a SwiftUI View to render a circle with text in it:
struct CircleView : View {
@ObservedObject var model: CircleModel
var body: some View {
ZStack {
Circle()
.fill(Color.blue)
Text(model.text)
.foregroundColor(Color.white)
}
}
}
And let’s say this was our view’s model:
import Combine
class CircleModel: ObservableObject {
@Published var text: String
init(text: String) {
self.text = text
}
}
Then our UIKit view controller could add the SwiftUI view, set its frame/constraints within the UIView
, and update its model as you see fit:
import UIKit
import SwiftUI
class ViewController: UIViewController {
private weak var timer: Timer?
private var model = CircleModel(text: "")
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
addCircleView()
startTimer()
}
deinit {
timer?.invalidate()
}
}
private extension ViewController {
func addCircleView() {
let circleView = CircleView(model: model)
let controller = UIHostingController(rootView: circleView)
addChild(controller)
controller.view.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = false
view.addSubview(controller.view)
controller.didMove(toParent: self)
NSLayoutConstraint.activate([
controller.view.widthAnchor.constraint(equalTo: view.widthAnchor, multiplier: 0.5),
controller.view.heightAnchor.constraint(equalTo: view.heightAnchor, multiplier: 0.5),
controller.view.centerXAnchor.constraint(equalTo: view.centerXAnchor),
controller.view.centerYAnchor.constraint(equalTo: view.centerYAnchor)
])
}
func startTimer() {
var index = 0
timer = Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: 1, repeats: true) { [weak self] _ in
index += 1
self?.model.text = "Tick \(index)"
}
}
}
I have some idea in mind.
- Wrap the SwiftUI with a
UIHostingController
- Initialize the controller
- Add the new controller as a child view controller
- Add the controller view as a subview to where it should go
Thus:
addChild(hostingViewController)
hostingViewController.view.frame = ...
view.addSubview(hostingViewController.view)
hostingViewController.didMove(toParent: self)
A view controller always uses other view controllers as views.
Stanford CS193P, https://youtu.be/w7a79cx3UaY?t=679
Reference
- How to add an UIViewController's view as subview
- Place UIViewController inside UIView
- Use UIViewController as TableView cell