Is there any easy way to manually set the orientation of an interface? I need to set the interface to portrait even though the device orientation might be in landscape during loading. Kinda want to stay away from CGAffineTransforms.
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    3 Answers
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            One method I know that works for me (and is a bit of a hack and can display one orientation before changing to the orientation you want) is:
- (void)viewDidAppear:(BOOL)animated 
{
    [super viewDidAppear:animated];
    UIApplication* application = [UIApplication sharedApplication];
    if (application.statusBarOrientation != UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait)
    {
        UIViewController *c = [[UIViewController alloc]init];
        [self presentModalViewController:c animated:NO];
        [self dismissModalViewControllerAnimated:NO];
        [c release];
    }
}
        Shane Powell
        
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                    This actually works really well for the situation I described. But for some reason does not work well with trying to force landscape from portrait mode(changing UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait to UIInterfaceOrientationLandscapeLeft). Ideas? – brad_roush Aug 31 '11 at 22:38
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                    I have no idea Dan, you will have to try it yourself by making a sub-classed UIViewController that only handles landscape in the 'shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation:' method. – Shane Powell Aug 08 '12 at 23:45
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                    @ShanePowell, your code worked great on pre iOS6. Is there any such tricks for iOS6? – Ananth Sep 26 '12 at 08:36
 
2
            
            
        override this to control the orientation until loading...
-(BOOL)shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation:(UIInterfaceOrientation)toInterfaceOrientation
        Saran
        
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                    Yes, you are right. My mistake. I updated my answer. You can consider just overriding the shouldAutorotateToInterfaceOrientation and maintain the orientation as long as you need. – Saran Aug 31 '11 at 22:24
 
2
            
            
        First, set your app and views to only support portrait, then use this category method taken from my refactoring library, es_ios_utils:
@interface UIViewController(ESUtils)
    // Forces without using a private api.
    -(void)forcePortrait;
@end
@implementation UIViewController(ESUtils)
-(void)forcePortrait
{
    //force portrait orientation without private methods.
    UIViewController *c = [[UIViewController alloc] init];
    [self presentModalViewController:c animated:NO];
    [self dismissModalViewControllerAnimated:NO];
    [c release];
}
@end
The view, dismissed before the frame completes, won't be displayed.
        Peter DeWeese
        
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                    I probably got this from Shane or whatever his source was. His is a bit more complete, and mine suggests the use of a category for reuse. – Peter DeWeese Aug 31 '11 at 22:11
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                    Portrait is the default supported orientation for an unextended UIViewController, and presenting it will force a valid orientation. – Peter DeWeese Jul 06 '13 at 17:37