I'm having an issue installing a custom font (from Google Fonts) in Xcode 4.6.3. I am doing the following:
Downloading my font from Google Fonts
Installing it on my mac so that I can get its system name
drag my font file (Inconsolata.ttf) into the "Supporting Files" folder in Xcode
Go to my Info.Plist file and add Inconsolata.tff as an item in the UIAppFonts array.
try to print out my installed fonts in the list of fonts using
try to use my custom font with it's full name, which I found in Finder
step 5: print out All UIFonts:
// When I search for "Inconsolata" in my Debug Console, it returns nothing
// Therefore I think that the font simply isn't being installed...
for (NSString *familyName in [UIFont familyNames]) {
for (NSString *fontName in [UIFont fontNamesForFamilyName:familyName]) {
NSLog(#"%#", fontName);
}
}
step 6: use custom UIFont:
// this line doesn't work.
cell.textLabel.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"Inconsolata" size:15];
// this line works. it changes font to Helvetica-Bold
// cell.textLabel.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"Helvetica-Bold" size:15];
Fixed by adding target when adding font file, like so
Related
I want to set bold font on UILabel. I generate label by coding. when i try to set bold font on label ios set system regular font but i want to set 'Noto sans-Bold' font. In storyboard set font completely.
My code is
UILabel *lblName=[[UILabel alloc]initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0, 25, 100, 21)];
lblName.text=#"Hello World";
[lblName setFont:[UIFont fontWithName:#"Noto Sans-Bold" size:15.0]];
[self.view addSubview:lblName];
If you haven't got the formatting of your font title correct, it will automatically default back to system font.
The issue is with your font name and since Noto isn't native it's going to be difficult to know exactly what name you need to provide.
Make sure you have added that font to your project.
You can check your available fonts by running this code:
SWIFT
for familyName in UIFont.familyNames() {
print("\n-- \(familyName) \n")
for fontName in UIFont.fontNamesForFamilyName(familyName) {
print(fontName)
}
}
OBJECTIVE-C
for (NSString *familyName in [UIFont familyNames]){
NSLog(#"Family name: %#", familyName);
for (NSString *fontName in [UIFont fontNamesForFamilyName:familyName]) {
NSLog(#"--Font name: %#", fontName);
}
}
lblname.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"Noto Sans-Bold" size:18];
and one more thing check your font correctly it is available in list or not.
Here is a list of available fonts .
List of available fonts
EDIT:-
or if you want to set font which not available in xcode then you have to first install it in XCode
please follow this tutorial.
Install custom fonts
As said by Jilouc follow this procedure.
Add the font files to your resource files
Edit your Info.plist: Add a new entry with the key Fonts provided by application.
For each of your files, add the file name to this array
On the example below, I've added the font "DejaVu Sans Mono":
In your application you can
the use [UIFont fontWithName:#"DejaVuSansMono-Bold" size:14.f].
Or if you want to use it in html/css, just use font-family:DejaVu
Sans Mono;
in iOS 8, Xcode6, I add a custom font, in info.plist. It's there in Build Phases. It's there in the storyboard, but it does not list in familyNames. I've read every other Stack Overflow post on this several times.
The file is CODBARD.TTF. The actual postscript name is codabard.
for (NSString* family in [UIFont familyNames])
{
NSLog(#"%#", family);
for (NSString* name in [UIFont fontNamesForFamilyName: family])
{
NSLog(#" %#", name);
}
}
It's not there.
And this line of code just produces a nil result
UIFont *customFont = [UIFont fontWithName:#"codabard" size:20];
You have to use that font somewhere in a xib or storyboard
I create a blank xib and add labels which use the desired font, than i don't use the xib nowhere, but this loads the custom fonts
I am unable to set custom font for the UILabel in XCode.
This is what I've tried:
Download "JennaSue" font -- http://www.dafont.com/jenna-sue.font
Open "app-info.plist" under "Supporting Files" folder
Add new row in the list with key "Fonts provided by application"
In this array add "JennaSue.ttf"
Use it in the code like this:
self.someLabel.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"JennaSue" size:14];
And nothing happens -- the default font is visible.
Why? What am I doing wrong? How can I fix it?
Be sure your font is in Bundle Resources. For some reason Xcode it is not importing custom font properly most of the time:
I've got the font working:
Example code: here
Go to your project's info.plist file,
Right click and select Add row,
Type Fonts provided by application in the new row,
Type in the desired font name as items for this key.
Drag and drop the font file into the project,
Apply it to the text you want:
someLabel.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"JennaSue" size: 12.0];
I think you've missed step 5 up there.
Update: When doing step 5, remember to check the marks for copying the actual file into project directory:
Remember to clean your project by pressing "command+alt+shift+K" (IRRC!)
And then go to your
and then go to your project's Build Phases, and make sure you can see your .ttf file file among the resource files:
P.S. I'm not on my Mac at the moment, so I used screenshots from this tutorial. That's why I grayed out the unnecessary lines for your issue.
Check this code:
NSArray *names = [UIFont familyNames];
NSLog(#"Font FamilyNames : ");
for (NSString *name in names) {
NSLog(#"Font Family: %#",name);
NSArray *fontFaces = [UIFont fontNamesForFamilyName:name];
for (NSString *fname in fontFaces) {
NSLog(#" %#",fname);
}
}
self.someLabel.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"use correct name" size:self.someLabel.font.pointSize];
and use the same name printed with NSLog.
After adding custom font to Xcode don't forget to add font to plist.
Project settings > Info > Custom IOS target properties
Add property Fonts provided by application and type your custom font(filename of font file).
Then you can use that code example
self.someLabel.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"JennaSue" size:14];
Notice: make sure that you use right font name in code. To do that you should add this font to your Mac's font book, open font book, choose that font and check the right name font.
Hope this helps
self.someLabel.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"JennaSue.ttf" size:self.someLabel.font.pointSize];
i used following code and it's done
UILabel * lblTest = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(10, 0, 200, 100)];
lblTest.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"JennaSue" size:25.0];
lblTest.text = #"Hello World";
[self.view addSubview:lblTest];
and if still not working looking at your system font book and search that font and That Font you have to use to get it work
also try this lblTest.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"Jenna Sue" size:25.0];
The font could be corrupted or something. I tried the solutions provided by Gabriel.Massana & Neeku and it worked on some fonts. Try adding the font to your Mac. If it showed verification problem, most probably it's not gonna work in your app. Hope this helps
is the file visible in Compile Source now…if yes then you may have the font name wrong..sometimes the font names are different then their file name…try running a
for (NSString *familyName in [UIFont familyNames])
{
for (NSString *fontName in [UIFont fontNamesForFamilyName:familyName])
{
NSLog(#"%#", fontName);
}
}
this lines of code..you will be able to see the actual name of the font and use that name instead
Here is #Ritu's answer in Swift 2. Just put this in your AppDelegate, or in viewDidLoad method of your View Controller:
let names = UIFont.familyNames()
for name in names {
print("Font Family: \(name)")
let fontFaces = UIFont.fontNamesForFamilyName(name)
for fname in fontFaces {
print(" \(fname)")
}
}
You will have all your font names in console log, just copy and paste the one you need in your code.
I've looked through almost every thread on creating a custom font for a Label. What am i doing wrong?
plist:
bundle resources:
resources:
The code:
UILabel *headLine = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(screenWidth/2-55, screenHeight/2-100, 110, 35)];
headLine.textColor = headlineColor;
headLine.text = #"HEADLINE";
UIFont *pacificoFont = [UIFont fontWithName:#"Pacifico" size:35.0f];
headLine.textAlignment = UITextAlignmentCenter;
[headLine setFont:pacificoFont];
[self.view addSubview: headLine];
There are a lot of errors that can be done with custom fonts (more info here).
However, I suspect that your family name is wrong. Use this to print the available family names and check if "Pacifico" is there:
for (NSString* family in [UIFont familyNames]) {
NSLog(#"%#", family);
for (NSString* name in [UIFont fontNamesForFamilyName: family]) {
NSLog(#" %#", name);
}
}
When you declare a UIFont with a custom name you have to specify the family of the font, and not the filename of the ttf file :)
follow the below steps:
1)Add your custom font files into your project using Xcode as a resource
2)Add a key to your Info.plist file called UIAppFonts.
3)Make this key an array
4)For each font you have, enter the full name of your font file (including the extension) as items to the UIAppFonts array
5)Save Info.plist
6)Now in your application you can simply call [UIFont fontWithName:#"CustomFontName" size:12] to get the custom font to use with your UILabels and UITextViews, etc…
note: Make sure the fonts are in your Copy Bundle Resources.
I want to add GillSans-Bold font to a UILabel.
I have set it in the xib file , and I'm also setting it up in my class as follows :
[label setFont:[UIFont fontWithName:#"GillSans-Bold" size:18]];
But , it doesn't seem to work for me.
Any suggestions ?
iPhone 4.3 doesn't have Gill Sans, but iPad has it since 3.2.1.
See this list comparing fonts for iPad 4.3 and iPhone 4.3. To be sure, this is how you get the list of fonts available on your device:
for (NSString *familyName in [UIFont familyNames]) {
for (NSString *fontName in [UIFont fontNamesForFamilyName:familyName]) {
NSLog(#"%#", fontName);
}
}
If it says
GillSans
GillSans-Bold
GillSans-BoldItalic
GillSans-Italic
then [UIFont fontWithName:#"GillSans-Bold" size:18] should return a valid font.
For this to be working I had to add this font in my project directory , and added this font in the Info.Plist file
Does the font GillSans-Bold exist? Check if [UIFont fontWithName:#"GillSans-Bold" size:18] returns an UIFont, not null.
Swift
let label = UILabel()
label.font = UIFont(name: "Roboto-Regular", size: 16)
label.text = "Your text here"
P.S. Before that you must:
Add custom font in project
Add font names in Info.plist file
Add font files in Copy Bundle Resources
After that you can also use this fonts in storyboards