Fragile Space – opposite of non-breaking space - ios

Under iOS I'm wondering if there is a kind of "extra fragile" space that I could put in to a string.
If I display it in a UILabel (or other control), and the text needs to be split over >1 line, then the layout would try to split on a a fragile space if it possibly can.
Eg, if <> is a fragile space symbol, then the string "All on one line if possible<>but this on another line if needed." would display as:
All on one line if possible
but this on another line if needed.
… assuming that there wasn't room for the whole string on one line.
Or perhaps the concept is more a "Newline here if you need to".
Maybe something with ranges in NSAttributedString that can describe where breaking should be preferred? Or some other way to specify this to a label?

Related

How can I standardize the the varying truncating dot characters of UILabel?

I have a plist file which I decode to load data onto my application.
This plist file contains String type values that gets mapped to UILabel's text property.
I noticed that the truncating behavior of the text in the label is not always the same.
To be more specific, the three dots that are added when the text is truncated are, as opposed to my expectation, two kinds: one being ... and the other being ⋯ which appears to be this unicode character in this link.
I checked UILabel's attribute settings but I was unable to find any settings related to this behavior.
Has anyone else experienced this problem and standardized the truncating character to be ...?
Here is the image describing the problem mentioned above. Both labels have 2 lines and have new line escape character inserted between the first line and the second line of text. I am posting a link to this image because apparently I don't have enough reputation to post an image.
varying truncating characters of UILabel
IMO this is a bug in UILabel, and it may be worth opening a Feedback about it.
TL;DR: I recommend using TTTAttributedLabel.
Long-winded answer, because this was such an interesting question:
UILabel uses a different ellipsis based on the language script being truncated. As you've noticed, for most scripts, they use HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS (…), or something very similar. But for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean (CJK), they use MIDLINE HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS (⋯), or again, something very similar. The only other exception I've found is Burmese, which uses three circles that I don't recognize.
In my tests, all the following used …: Latin, Cyrillic, Bengali, Arabic, Hebrew, Hindi, Thai, Kannada, Nepali, and Mongolian (I kid. iOS can't layout Mongolian. Nobody can layout Mongolian, but it still uses …). UILabel even uses … for Lao, even though I thought ຯ was specifically for that, but I guess eventually everything becomes Latin.
The problem with UILabel being so clever for CJK and Burmese is that it decides what character to use exclusively by looking at the first character being removed. And it thinks SPACE is Latin (or at least not "special").
So what to do? My recommendation is probably to use TTTAttributedLabel, since it lets you configure the truncation character, and more importantly, is open source so you can fix it if it's not working the way you want.
The second option would be to truncate the text by hand using techniques like the one described in How to change truncate characters in UILabel?. There are probably better ways to do it using CTFrameGetVisibleStringRange instead of constantly shrinking the string until it fits, but I don't know if it's worth the effort. (If that path sounds useful, I could probably write up something that does it. It's just probably not worth the trouble.)
And the final option I know is to replace the SPACE character with an "equivalent" CJK character. The closest I've found that works is HANGUL FILLER (U+3164), but I don't like it. It's too wide, and I expect that it will make Korean uncomfortable to read (but I rarely try to read Korean, so I may be wrong here):
With SPACE: 안녕 하세요
With FILLER: 안녕ㅤ하세요
There's also HALFWIDTH HANGUL FILLER (U+FFA0), which is better, but UILabel seems to make it zero width (this may be a font issue, so maybe worth trying):
With SPACE: 안녕 하세요
With HALF: 안녕ᅠ하세요
let string = "안녕 하세요"
let filler = "\u{3164}"
label.text = string.replacingOccurrences(of: " ", with: filler)
OTOH, you may run into the same problem if you use any other non-CJK characters, like Latin punctuation or Arabic numerals. So this solution may not scale. And you should make sure that Voice Over properly ignores it.

Change the height of individual characters using core text

I have a font where unfortunately the numbers and letters are different heights. I need to display a reference code which is a mix of letters and numbers and the uneven heights of the characters looks jarring. Is it possible with core text (or another technology on iOS) to render certain characters with a slightly stretched height so that it looks even numbers and letters are displayed together.
E.g i have the string '23Rt59RQ' I need the 2,3,5,9 to be rendered with a larger height.
AFAICT, there's nothing in the CGContext API (which is what you'd want to use for laying out sets of glyphs) which would directly, easily facilitate this.
If it's really very important to use the font you are using, you could make separate calls to CGContextShowGlyphsAtPositions for alphabetic and numeral characters, calling CGContextSetFontSize each time so that the end result ends up matching, but this is a lot of overhead for just drawing text, and will probably result in undesirable performance.
My real advice would be to pick a better font so that this isn't even an issue :)
In the end of used regex to identify the character groups and then created an attributed string varying the font size in the font given in the NSFontAttributeName attribute according to which characters were to be displayed.
Kinda hacky but it had the desired effect.

In a UILabel, is it possible to force a line NOT to break in a certain place

I have a UILabel that is supposed to be two lines long. The text is localized into French and English.
I'm setting the attributedText property of the label. The text is constructed from three appended strings, say textFragment1, textFragment2 and textFragment3. The middle string is actually an image created with an NSTextAttachment.
I want to make sure that textFragment2 and textFragment3 are on the same line. The first string may or may not wrap depending on how long it is. The problem is that my French text is currently fairly short, so the line is wrapping after textFragment2.
I have fixed this temporarily by adding a line break symbol in the localized French text for textFragment1. I don't really love this solution though. I was wondering if there is a way to treat textFragment2 and textFragment3 so that they will always be together on the same line.
You could use a non-breaking space (\u00a0) to join textFragment2 and textFragment3. This character looks just like a normal space—i.e. it results in the same amount of whitespace—but line breaking will not take place on either side of it.
You could also use a zero-width space (\u2060). Using this character will not result in any whitespace, but it will still prevent line breaking on either side. This is what you want if you don’t want any space between textFragment2 and textFragment3 but you still want to prevent line breaking there. (It’s also useful if you have a word with a hyphen in the middle of it but you want to prevent the line from being broken after the hyphen.)
You can read more about these kinds of characters on Wikipedia.

Calculate characters that fit a fixed rect TextView

I have seen here people needing to calculate the size of the NSString given a size but I need to do the opposite.
Given a specified rect (or fixed UITextView, or multiline UILabel, no scrolling) I need to know:
if it managed to show all the chars of my NSString
if not, what is the last char shown
So that I can display the remaining text in another UITextView (of course if I could use a single UITextView I would not have this problem).
At first it seems a simple thing to do, but actually I am not finding a way, intuitively I think I could use either UITextView's:
textView.contentSize.height;
or NSString's:
sizeWithFont:constrainedToSize:lineBreakMode:
or a combination of the two, but I need to be precise and those methods do not help me in telling what is the last character that managed to fit the visible area of the UITextView.
Not sure if this is actually possible, but is a requirement of my client who thinks programming iOS is like printing a newspaper and expects to be able to format text around an image....
You could maybe get the maximum height of one line of text from a one character long string.
If you use that with sizeWithFont:constrainedToSize:lineBreakMode: then you should be able to know if your text runs onto more than one line (if the cgsize height is greater than the height of one line of text).
In order to find out the last character (or word) you would have to loop around the length of the string adding characters (or words) as you go and checking for when the cgsize height increases to add a new line, this will give you the character point when to split into multiple strings ( for multiple fields/labels/textviews ) or when to insert line breaks into the text ( if using a single multi-line textview or label ).
I hope you find an easier way...

Align UITextView Right and Left.

I have UITextView, which is left aligned.
When last word does not fit on current line it goes to next line leaving spaces on end of line.
which does not give good look and feel.
So, what I want that if words of particular line feels the spaces left at end.
i.e. Spaces between two words can dynamically varies.
Here I am giving example of Scenario:
The width of text view,never put off until (here tomorrow does not fit,so it goes to next line leaving spaces).
Tomorrow what you can avoid all together.
So, problem is it does look good.
What I want is:
The width of text view never put off, until (varying spaces shown by)
tomorrow -what -you -can
avoid --all -- together.
Thanks in Advance.
There is no setting for justified aligment for text you only have center, left and right. If you want justified aligment where every line has the same amount of characters or something like that you can format the text entered to have carriage returns after x amount of characters or words, or something like that.

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