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Designing user interfaces with Xcode

Starting with Visual Studio 2019 version 16.8 and Visual Studio for Mac version 8.8, the recommended way to edit .storyboard and .nib files is by editing them in Xcode Interface Builder on a Mac.

Note

Starting in Visual Studio 2019 version 16.9, there will be no supported way to edit iOS storyboards on Windows. Use Visual Studio for Mac and the Xcode Interface Builder to continue building your Xamarin.iOS user interfaces.

This article covers common solutions to building user interfaces with the Xcode Interface Builder. This article may be particularly helpful if you previously edited your UIs with the Xamarin.iOS Designer.

For a more in-depth walkthrough of storyboards, see Storyboards in Xamarin.iOS.

How to open a storyboard

Open an iOS user interface file in Visual Studio for Mac by right-clicking on a storyboard file and selecting Xcode Interface Builder:

Select Interface Builder

You should then see the Xcode window open. Any edits saved here will be reflected in your Visual Studio project.

Xcode Window

For more information on the Xcode Interface Builder, see Interface Builder Built-In.

Creating a new control

To create a new control with the Xcode Interface Builder, first select the storyboard you'd like to edit. Then, open the Xcode Library dialog (View > Show Library) and drag the control to your storyboard.

Library Picker

Next, open up the corresponding view controller header file. For a blank "Single View" Xamarin.iOS app, the default storyboard is called Main.storyboard. The corresponding view controller file is called ViewController.cs in Visual Studio with a corresponding ViewController.h header file when viewed from Xcode.

From the Xcode Interface Builder, open both the storyboard and the corresponding view controller header file. Holding the Control key (^), drag the control from the storyboard to the view controller file until Xcode prompts you with a dialog box.

Demo Link Control

As illustrated above, the corresponding C# code will be automatically generated in the view controller's code-behind file. You can now access this control within your Xamarin.iOS project.

Editing an existing control's name

To edit an existing control's name from the Xcode Interface Builder and reflect that change back into your C# project, navigate to the appropriate view controller header file, right-cick, and select Refactor.

Refactor Control

Your code-behind file will regenerate with the new name, allowing you to access the control via code in Visual Studio for Mac.

Known problems

This section covers known issues.

"Visual Studio could not communicate with Xcode"

In macOS Catalina or higher, you may encounter the error below:

cant communicate err

First, in your Mac's system preferences under Security & Privacy > Automation, ensure that Visual Studio is listed and Xcode is checked.

macOS security

If Xcode is checked and the error message still appears, you may need to reset the Visual Studio for Mac privacy permissions.

This can be accomplished by launching a Terminal Window and issuing the following command:

sudo tccutil reset All "com.microsoft.visual-studio"

To ensure the above change takes effect, reset your Mac's PRAM. For instructions, see Reset NVRAM or PRAM on your Mac.