I want to put 2 lines in the title of UIAlertView with first line in bold and bigger font and second line with regular and smaller font.
Is there a direct way of doing it or do I need to extend the UIAlertView to write my own custom alert view. Any pointers.
UIAlertview has a title property and a body property. The body property is a non bold and I think smaller font than the title property. You could use the body as your smaller title property unless you need two titles and a body, in that case, you will have to roll your own.
As far as I konw,before ios 7,you can write two UILabel,one text bold and one not.
Then add these subviews to UIAlertview.
Now,I think the only way is to define your own UIAlertView.It is easy.
Related
What I want to implement
I am looking for a way to display a title label and a detail text label in a NSMenuItem.
Preferably it would look something like this:
The Title Label is left aligned with all the other NSMenuItem's
titles
The Detail Text Label is right-aligned
The Detail Text Label has a different text color than the title
Selection/Submenus etc. work as expected
What have I tried already
By reading the documentation I found the following possible implementations:
Create a custom NSView and set NSMenuItem.view
Use a default NSMenuItem and use a NSAttributedString
First I tried to use a custom NSView. However I could not get the NSMenuItem to size correctly in order to display all the available text. I guess some autoresizing masks do not work correctly but I am not sure. Also this way I would need to re-implement selection/arrow for the submenu, ...
Then I started to experiment with NSAttributedString. I calculate the title with the most characters and then pad the string with title += string.padding(toLength: maxTitleLength, withPad: " ", startingAt: 0). The NSAttributedString colors the title and the detail label differently. However this does not seem to work since the detail labels are not correctly aligned although the title is padded to the same length. I guess this makes sense since characters have different widths?
TL;DR - Question
So is there any other way to implement the desired design which I did not find? Do you have any advice for me on how to implement this?
Nevermind I found the answer myself. Actually it works for me now by using the view property of the NSMenuItem to set a custom view. This answer lead me to the right direction: Highlighting a NSMenuItem with a custom view?.
I am trying to create a custom keyboard using the app keyboard extension. I am happy with the layout but the output is depended on the UITextField's font.
Is there a way to force a different font (use special characters?) while using the keyboard ?
Thank you
It depends.
Text field (or any other view that draws text) uses 2 informations on how to show some text. One is the sequence of characters called String and the other one is how the string should be represented. The second one is then split it things like fonts, colors, line height, line breaking and wrapping...
So the keyboard alone is not enough to for instance present a certain part of word using different fonts. You need at least a bit of access to the item that represents the text. So if you have no access to your text field then the answer is; No, you can not fore a different font when using different keyboard.
If you do have the access then the answer should lie in NSAttributedString. It is a string you can assign to most items under attributedText. This class wraps your raw string and can add many properties to parts of text you want to change. That includes using a different font.
Another approach would be using HTML tags. Again you will need to process this using for instance NSAttributedString or display it with another element like web view.
I would try it with using NSAttributedString. Hook up to delegate and implement textField(: shouldChangeCharactersIn: replacementString:. The implementation itself may still not be easy though.
I need help in string formatting in iOS UITextView. I have a textView, for now it`s editable. Now I want to add a few strings. they should be like header and user must be able to type only under it, and when he press ENTER or DELETE line sting should change their position, so at the end it should look like
Header 1(with color not editable)
/* user can type here
*/
Header 2 (with color not editable)
/* user can type here
*/
I think i need to use delegate and attributed string or something,
but I can`t figure it out. HELP please
The best way to achieve this is to make two labels and two text views on top of a scroll view. like
The heights of two text views can by dynamic depending on the text length. And in this case you can avoid endless IF conditions as you would need to put everything in a single Text view.
The advantage of this approach is the label text format will be very easy to set, you can simply set the attributed string in the storyboard.
Is it possible to add a text link into a TextView? I want the link to perhaps behave like a button, where I can assign an action to it.
EDIT: When I say assign an action, I mean actually giving it something in the code. I'm wondering if it's possible to dynamically add a "button" into text that I can assign a coded action to.
Live scenario
Think of something like a dictionary app. Maybe the definition of one word uses another word that you might not know the definition of, so being able to click on that word to instantly search it rather than having to type it in would be a nice user friendly feature. It seems rather unlikely, though, I guess.
I would recommend using NIAttributedLabel from Nimbus, an open source iOS library. You can specify text ranges that are links, and you get delegate messages sent when a user taps on it.
Main Nimbus site: http://nimbuskit.info/
NIAttributedLabel docs: http://docs.nimbuskit.info/interface_n_i_attributed_label.html
in the inspector, go to the Text View Attributes tab then make sure "Detect Links" is checked.
Yes you can. Add the URL into the text view, then open up the Attributes Inspector. You will see an option in there to detect links.
I know of a way, but its a LOT of work. First, you have an NSAttributedString that you have the text view display. Second, attribute the range of text you want to be the button. Third, assign a tap gesture recognizer to the text view and in the method called by the recognizer, you'll use core text to determine if the tap happened over the range of text that represents the buttons.
Heres how youll use core text: create a framesetter with the attributed string. Create a frame from the framsetter with the shape of a square that is the frame of the text view, inset by the padding of the text view. The frame will allow you to get the y origins of every line in the text view and and once you know what line the tap happened on, you can use the line to then figure out exactly what character was tapped on that line by giving it an x offset. Once you know character index on the line, you can add it to the beginning of the range of the line and get the index of the character within the whole string. Then you can check if its within the range of the text that is your button. If it is, you can then call a method to simulate a target action type behavior.
Ive explained the process of how to accomplish this and specified what kinds of core text objects youll need, ill let you look up the specific api details:
https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/Carbon/Reference/CoreText_Framework_Ref/_index.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40005304
You can also use my objc core text wrapper:
https://github.com/mysterioustrousers/MYSCoreText
What about CoreText? It Can draw many kinds of Text .
I want to insert a URL hyperlink into a UITextField that has different display text.
This is super easy in html:
Go To Google
How can I do this in iOS?
You can change the text style inside your UITextField via an attributed string sent to the text field's "attributedText" property.
However, what I suspect you really want to do is have a link that's clickable. I would recommend using a UIButton with a custom type (i.e. no border) and you can set the color and the underline style.
But like Evan said, if you have multiple lines of text, it may be smarter to use a UITextField where you set "editable" to NO and turn on the LINK traits (both of these you can do from the object inspector in Xcode).
Alright, so here's what I did to get what I wanted. I used UIWebView, and simply linked it to an html page in the project that has the text, and hyperlink at the bottom with different text displayed.
Answer is here :
If you want it as clickable Hyperlink,
NSString *string = #"Go To Google";
You need to add "BACKWARD SLASH" before ". That's it.