Could not instantiate class named IBNSLayoutConstraint Could not instantiate class named IBNSLayoutConstraint objective-c objective-c

Could not instantiate class named IBNSLayoutConstraint


You're getting this error because you've set a constraint to an IBOutlet that is removed at runtime. This happens when you set the constraint to be a placeholder in Interface Builder. Since the constraint is removed, when it goes to unarchive it, it throws an error saying it can't do so.

There are two ways to correct this.

Method 1

  1. Right-click on your Storyboard > Open As > Source Code
  2. In the opened storyboard xml, search for placeholder="YES".
  3. You'll find constraints that are set to be removed at runtime. Remove the placeholder attribute from the constraint, save and close.
  4. Run the app and your problem should be fixed.

Method 2

  1. Find the constraint that's causing your problems in Interface Builder. Uncheck the Placeholder option in the GUI. This should be one of the constraints that's set to an IBOutlet in the ViewController that's causing your crash.

Interface Builder attribute editor showing the Placeholder option checked.

This is what it should look like:

Interface Builder attribute editor showing the Placeholder option unchecked.

Alternative

Assuming you actually want the constraint to be a placeholder, then you'll need to remove any referencing outlets. To do this, select the constraint that you wish to be a placeholder. Then open the connections inspector (the button furthest to the right that looks like this: (->) ) and then remove any referencing outlets that may exist on that constraint.


I had the same problem just now and the following worked for me.

I released a working version of my app to the App Store, came back to work on it again a few days later tapping onto one my tabs in the UITabBarController it crashed with the error:

Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSInvalidUnarchiveOperationException', reason: 'Could not instantiate class named IBNSLayoutConstraint'

I didn't have any placeholder layout constraints that I was aware of or constraint outlets that shouldn't have been defined.

The solution for me was to simply turn size classes off and keep size class data for iPhone (App is only for iPhone). This must've deleted anything I'd missed in the size classes. I want size classes so I turned them back on and the app just worked again.


This might not be necessarily a constraint problem. For me it was caused by not having checked "Installed" for a size class that was applying to my layout, see here install must be checked