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Custom back button in UINavigationController

For an application I'm developing, I need to display a custom back button in a navigation bar. I have the button asset as a PNG image, and I'm writing this code:

- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated {
    [super viewWillAppear:animated];
    UIButton *backButton = [UIButton buttonWithType:UIButtonTypeCustom];
    backButton.frame = CGRectMake(0, 0, 79, 29.0);
    [backButton setImage:[UIImage imageNamed:@"button_back.png"] forState:UIControlStateNormal];
    self.navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = [[[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithCustomView:backButton] autorelease];

}

When I push this view controller, the custom button does not show up, and instead I get the standard back button with the title of this view controller inside.

Things I already tried:

  1. Doubled check that the button backButton is created properly, by adding it to the view hierarchy. It displays properly.
  2. In the same method, changed the title property of the navigationItem and confirmed that it changes (as expected) the content of my back button.

Can anyone spot what I'm doing wrong? Did anyone succeed in using a custom image as the back button on with a UINavigationController ?

Starting with iOS 5, this is simple:

[[UIBarButtonItem appearance]
            setBackButtonBackgroundImage:[UIImage imageNamed:@"back_button.png"]
            forState:UIControlStateNormal barMetrics:UIBarMetricsDefault];

You can place that in your app delegate and it will set the background image to all back buttons in the app (for that control state and bar metrics, of course).

I'm reposting my solution from https://stackoverflow.com/a/16831482/171933 :

I create a simple category on UIViewController :

UIViewController+ImageBackButton.h

#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>

@interface UIViewController (ImageBackButton)

- (void)setUpImageBackButton;

@end

UIViewController+ImageBackButton.m

#import "UIViewController+ImageBackButton.h"

@implementation UIViewController (ImageBackButton)

- (void)setUpImageBackButton
{
    UIButton *backButton = [[UIButton alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, 34, 26)];
    [backButton setBackgroundImage:[UIImage imageNamed:@"back_arrow.png"] forState:UIControlStateNormal];
    UIBarButtonItem *barBackButtonItem = [[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithCustomView:backButton];
    [backButton addTarget:self action:@selector(popCurrentViewController) forControlEvents:UIControlEventTouchUpInside];
    self.navigationItem.leftBarButtonItem = barBackButtonItem;
    self.navigationItem.hidesBackButton = YES;
}

- (void)popCurrentViewController
{
    [self.navigationController popViewControllerAnimated:YES];
}

@end

Now all you have to do is #import UIViewController+ImageBackButton.h in either all of your view controllers or in a custom base view controller class that your other view controllers inherit from and implement the viewWillAppear: method:

- (void)viewWillAppear:(BOOL)animated
{
    [self setUpImageBackButton];
}

That's all. Now you have an image back button everywhere. Without a border. Enjoy!

The backBarButtonItem property works as intended, but it will always add its standard button shape and color based on the navigation bar tint color.

You can customize the text, but not replace the image.

One workaround, as Andrew Pouliot suggested, is to use leftBarButtonItem instead, but I stuck to the standard button instead.

Isn't the simplest solution just to design it from your storyboard with whatever image or colors you want, and just drag a new action to your controller?

Swift Code

 @IBAction func backButton(sender: AnyObject) { self.navigationController?.popViewControllerAnimated(true) } 

Confusingly backBarButtonItem is not what you're looking for.

It just controls the title on the back button for the next view controller. What you want is to set the leftBarButtonItem to your custom back button.

Johannes Fahrenkrug's Answer works, but the back image would appear at a very wired position.

Here I found a better way to position the image at the right place:

Make Sure You Have a back image with size 24x24(@1x) , I call it backImage

Execute the following code when your app Launch

UINavigationBar.appearance().barTintColor = nil
UINavigationBar.appearance().backIndicatorImage = backImage
UINavigationBar.appearance().backIndicatorTransitionMaskImage = backImage
UIBarButtonItem.appearance().setBackButtonTitlePositionAdjustment(UIOffsetMake(0, -60), forBarMetrics: .Default)

I do not think that ViewController itself should know anything about its back button According to OOP this is the responsibility of containerViewController in which your view controller is inserted, for example UINavigationController.

Subclass your NavigationController and overload in it superClass method like this:

@implementation STONavigationController

- (void)pushViewController:(UIViewController *)viewController animated:(BOOL)animated
{
    [super pushViewController:viewController animated:animated];
    if ([self.viewControllers indexOfObject:viewController] != NSNotFound &&
        [self.viewControllers indexOfObject:viewController] > 0){
        UIImage *img = [UIImage imageNamed:@"back-1"];
        UIButton *backButton = [[UIButton alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 0, img.size.width * 2, img.size.height * 2)];
        [backButton setBackgroundImage:img forState:UIControlStateNormal];
        UIBarButtonItem *barBackButtonItem = [[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithCustomView:backButton];
        [backButton addTarget:self action:@selector(popCurrentViewController) forControlEvents:UIControlEventTouchUpInside];
        viewController.navigationItem.leftBarButtonItem = barBackButtonItem;
        viewController.navigationItem.hidesBackButton   = YES;
    }
}

- (void)popCurrentViewController
{
    [self popViewControllerAnimated:YES];
}

@end 

See this answer here: How to create backBarButtomItem with custom view for a UINavigationController

You just need to set the backBarButtonItem property on the navigationController before pushing the viewController. Setting the backBarButtonItem property in the viewController's viewDidLoad method (for example) doesn't work.

As @pgb suggested you can use leftBarButtonItem instead of back button item. And to remove the default back button item set it to nil like follows;

navigationController?.navigationBar.backIndicatorImage = nil
navigationController?.navigationBar.backIndicatorTransitionMaskImage = nil

let button = UIButton.init(type: .custom)
button.imageView?.contentMode = UIViewContentMode.scaleAspectFit
button.setImage(UIImage.init(named: "top_back"), for: UIControlState.normal)
button.frame = CGRect.init(x: 0, y: 0, width: 75, height: 50) 
button.addTarget(self, action: #selector(handleBackButton), for: .touchUpInside)

let barButton = UIBarButtonItem.init(customView: button)
self.navigationItem.leftBarButtonItem = barButton

Simply create a UIBarButtonItem instead of an embedded UIButton in UIBarButtonItem . Works fine!

UIBarButtonItem *backButton = [[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithImage:[UIImage imageNamed:@"button_back.png"] style:UIBarButtonItemStyleBordered target:nil action:nil];

self.navigationItem.backBarButtonItem = backButton; 

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