TestsTested | ✓ |
LangLanguage | Obj-CObjective C |
License | MIT |
ReleasedLast Release | May 2016 |
Maintained by Mattt, Jonathan Hersh, Samuel Giddins.
A drop-in replacement for UILabel
that supports attributes, data detectors, links, and more
TTTAttributedLabel
is a drop-in replacement for UILabel
providing a simple way to performantly render attributed strings. As a bonus, it also supports link embedding, both automatically with NSTextCheckingTypes
and manually by specifying a range for a URL, address, phone number, event, or transit information.
Already using this library? Please comment on this issue to let us know which versions of iOS your app supports.
Even though UILabel
received support for NSAttributedString
in iOS 6, TTTAttributedLabel
has several unique features:
It also includes advanced paragraph style properties:
attributedTruncationToken
firstLineIndent
highlightedShadowRadius
highlightedShadowOffset
highlightedShadowColor
lineHeightMultiple
lineSpacing
minimumLineHeight
maximumLineHeight
shadowRadius
textInsets
verticalAlignment
As of version 1.10.0, TTTAttributedLabel
supports VoiceOver through the UIAccessibilityElement
protocol. Each link can be individually selected, with an accessibilityLabel
equal to its string value, and a corresponding accessibilityValue
for URL, phone number, and date links. Developers who wish to change this behavior or provide custom values should create a subclass and override accessibilityElements
.
tttattributedlabel
)CocoaPods is the recommended method of installing TTTAttributedLabel
. Simply add the following line to your Podfile
:
# Podfile
pod 'TTTAttributedLabel'
TTTAttributedLabel
can display both plain and attributed text: just pass an NSString
or NSAttributedString
to the setText:
setter. Never assign to the attributedText
property.
// NSAttributedString
TTTAttributedLabel *attributedLabel = [[TTTAttributedLabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectZero];
NSAttributedString *attString = [[NSAttributedString alloc] initWithString:@"Tom Bombadil"
attributes:@{
(id)kCTForegroundColorAttributeName : (id)[UIColor redColor].CGColor,
NSFontAttributeName : [UIFont boldSystemFontOfSize:16],
NSKernAttributeName : [NSNull null],
(id)kTTTBackgroundFillColorAttributeName : (id)[UIColor greenColor].CGColor
}];
// The attributed string is directly set, without inheriting any other text
// properties of the label.
attributedLabel.text = attString;
// NSString
TTTAttributedLabel *label = [[TTTAttributedLabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectZero];
label.font = [UIFont systemFontOfSize:14];
label.textColor = [UIColor darkGrayColor];
label.lineBreakMode = NSLineBreakByWordWrapping;
label.numberOfLines = 0;
// If you're using a simple `NSString` for your text,
// assign to the `text` property last so it can inherit other label properties.
NSString *text = @"Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet";
[label setText:text afterInheritingLabelAttributesAndConfiguringWithBlock:^ NSMutableAttributedString *(NSMutableAttributedString *mutableAttributedString) {
NSRange boldRange = [[mutableAttributedString string] rangeOfString:@"ipsum dolor" options:NSCaseInsensitiveSearch];
NSRange strikeRange = [[mutableAttributedString string] rangeOfString:@"sit amet" options:NSCaseInsensitiveSearch];
// Core Text APIs use C functions without a direct bridge to UIFont. See Apple's "Core Text Programming Guide" to learn how to configure string attributes.
UIFont *boldSystemFont = [UIFont boldSystemFontOfSize:14];
CTFontRef font = CTFontCreateWithName((__bridge CFStringRef)boldSystemFont.fontName, boldSystemFont.pointSize, NULL);
if (font) {
[mutableAttributedString addAttribute:(NSString *)kCTFontAttributeName value:(__bridge id)font range:boldRange];
[mutableAttributedString addAttribute:kTTTStrikeOutAttributeName value:@YES range:strikeRange];
CFRelease(font);
}
return mutableAttributedString;
}];
First, we create and configure the label, the same way you would instantiate UILabel
. Any text properties that are set on the label are inherited as the base attributes when using the -setText:afterInheritingLabelAttributesAndConfiguringWithBlock:
method. In this example, the substring "ipsum dolar", would appear in bold, such that the label would read "Lorem ipsum dolar sit amet", in size 14 Helvetica, with a dark gray color.
IBDesignable
TTTAttributedLabel
includes IBInspectable
and IB_DESIGNABLE
annotations to enable configuring the label inside Interface Builder. However, if you see these warnings when building...
IB Designables: Failed to update auto layout status: Failed to load designables from path (null)
IB Designables: Failed to render instance of TTTAttributedLabel: Failed to load designables from path (null)
...then you are likely using TTTAttributedLabel
as a static library, which does not support IB annotations. Some workarounds include:
TTTAttributedLabel
as a dynamic framework using CocoaPods with use_frameworks!
in your Podfile
, or with CarthageTTTAttributedLabel
by dragging its source files to your projectIn addition to supporting rich text, TTTAttributedLabel
can automatically detect links for dates, addresses, URLs, phone numbers, transit information, and allows you to embed your own links.
label.enabledTextCheckingTypes = NSTextCheckingTypeLink; // Automatically detect links when the label text is subsequently changed
label.delegate = self; // Delegate methods are called when the user taps on a link (see `TTTAttributedLabelDelegate` protocol)
label.text = @"Fork me on GitHub! (http://github.com/mattt/TTTAttributedLabel/)"; // Repository URL will be automatically detected and linked
NSRange range = [label.text rangeOfString:@"me"];
[label addLinkToURL:[NSURL URLWithString:@"http://github.com/mattt/"] withRange:range]; // Embedding a custom link in a substring
pod try TTTAttributedLabel
...or clone this repo and build and run/test the Espressos
project in Xcode to see TTTAttributedLabel
in action. If you don't have CocoaPods installed, grab it with [sudo] gem install cocoapods
.
cd Example
pod install
open Espressos.xcworkspace
TTTAttributedLabel
is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.