Guidelines for the key view loop

  • On several occasions over the years, people have asked why their key
    view loop doesn't work properly. Most of these queries never get
    answered on the list. After failing to find help for my key view loop
    problems either on this list or on web sites, I did some experimenting.

    The key view loop can be problematic to deal with. It is designed to
    just work magically, so in most cases it's not an issue. But if it
    doesn't work, it's pretty difficult to figure out why not. Here are
    some guidelines for getting a working key view loop.

    1. Consider whether you can settle for an automatically generated key
    view loop. Each responder's top left corner determines its placement
    in the loop. The loop proceeds from upper left to lower right, row by
    row (at least for left-to-right scripts). This is by far the easiest
    solution. To enable this, make sure the window's
    initialFirstResponder is nil. See also -[NSWindow
    recalculateKeyViewLoop].

    2. If the automatic key view loop is not suitable, set up your own
    key view loop using Interface Builder as much as possible. The
    window's initialFirstResponder outlet *must* be set, in order to
    disable automatic key loop generation. From that responder around the
    loop, set the nextKeyView outlet of each item in the loop. (If
    desired, the last item's nextKeyView can be set to the first item,
    thus closing the loop.) For any view with scrollbars (NSTextView,
    NSTableView, etc.), you should use the enclosing NSScrollView when
    setting nextKeyView.

    3. If you have any responders created in code, splice them into the
    key view loop early (preferably in awakeFromNib or maybe -
    [NSWindowController windowDidLoad]). For each (sequence of) new item
    (s), you must use call -[NSView setNextKeyView:] thus: once to make
    the previous item point to the (first) new one, (calls to make each
    new item point to the next), and finally to make the (last) new item
    point to its successor.

    4. If your window has a toolbar, toolbar items that are interested in
    becoming key view will automatically add and remove themselves as the
    toolbar is shown or hidden. The toolbar does not take into account
    the return value of -[NSWindow autorecalculatesKeyViewLoop]. Toolbar
    items are always placed in the loop before the top leftmost item.
    There is no easy way to change this.

    5. Once the window has been displayed, it can be extremely difficult
    to modify the key view loop - in particular if you are using
    NSScrollView or NSTabView. These (and others?) are special cases
    because they insert their contained views into the loop
    automatically. For information on the initialFirstResponder and key
    view loop of an NSTabViewItem, see the AppKit release notes for OS X
    10.1 <http://developer.apple.com/releasenotes/Cocoa/
    AppKitOlderNotes.html#X10_1Notes
    >.

    6. If you have items that should sometimes be in the loop and other
    times not, it is not advisable to attempt to splice them in and out
    of the loop. Instead, subclass -[NSResponder acceptsFirstResponder]
    for these items. If an item returns NO from this method, it will be
    left out of the loop (temporarily); if it returns YES, it will come
    back into the loop. Alternately, if the item is derived from
    NSControl (it probably is), you can call setRefusesFirstResponder: on
    it.

    7. If you make a mistake, your key view loop will cease to function,
    either in one direction or in both. Once it breaks it stays broken.
    To debug, comment out calls to setNextKeyView: or
    setInitialFirstResponder: until it works again. The offending call is
    likely trying to modify the key view loop in the presence of
    NSScrollView or NSTabView, after these objects have already done
    their behind-the-scenes loop-munging. Move the calls to an earlier
    point, or do without. (If you have no calls to setNextKeyView:, then
    check your nib - make sure the window's initialFirstResponder is set
    and that nextKeyView outlets are chained together the way you want.)

    8. In System Preferences/Keyboard & Mouse/Keyboard Shortcuts, at the
    bottom of the pane under "Full keyboard access", you can control
    whether key view loops include all controls or only text fields and
    scrolling lists (^F7 to toggle). You should test your key view loops
    with this setting in each state.

    These guidelines were determined by experiment and may not be
    entirely accurate. Corrections and further explanations are most
    welcome.

    --
    Justin Bur
    Druide informatique inc.
    Montreal