iOS 6.1 - fixed
As of iOS 6.1, this no longer occurs, it is very important to follow my tips in order to avoid a crash under iOS 6.0.x, the below still applies to that.
iOS 6.0.x workaround
This is in actual fact a bug in iOS 6.0, this should be fixed in future iOS releases.
An engineer from Apple has explained this bug and a workaround here: https://devforums.apple.com/message/731764
This is happening because the Application wants landscape orientation only but some Cocoa Touch View Controllers require strictly Portrait orientation which is the error - not that they should be requiring more then Portrait but their interpretation of the Applications requirements.
An example of this can be the following:
iPad app supporting landscape only displays a UIImagePickerController
via a UIPopoverController. The UIImagePickerController requires
Portrait orientation, but the app is forcing landscape only. Error
and... crash
Other frameworks that have been reported as problematic include the Game Center login view controller.
The workaround is pretty simple but not ideal... You keep the correct orientations declared in your info.plist/project info pane, but in the Application Delegate class you declare that you allow all orientations.
Now each View Controller you add to the window must specify itself that it can only be Landscape. Please check the link for more details.
I cannot stress how much you should not be subclassing UIImagePickerController
as the accepted solution is insisting you do.
The important thing here is "This class is intended to be used as-is and does not support subclassing."
In my case I added this to my application's delegate (I have a landscape only app), this tells the image picker it can display, because portrait is supported:
- (NSUInteger)application:(UIApplication *)application supportedInterfaceOrientationsForWindow:(UIWindow *)window{
return UIInterfaceOrientationMaskAll;
}
And then in my view controller which happened to be a UINavigationController
, I included a category with the following:
- (NSUInteger)supportedInterfaceOrientations{
return UIInterfaceOrientationMaskLandscape;
}
Now my app doesn't rotate, and the image picker asks the delegate if it can display as portrait and it gets told that's okay. So all plays out well.