How to make a UILabelView display text with new lines? - objective-c

I have a UILabelView within a RoundedRectView. The UILabelView is supposed to show a dynamically generated text string with new lines in it.
The problem is that the UILabel still shows the text as "blahblahbla..." and does not seem to show the text over multiple lines. The only exception is when I do a "sizeToFit" function call however at that time, the text no longer appears in the center of the parent view. I have the UILabelView number of lines to be 0 and also have increased the frame of the parent view (RoundedRectView)
What can I do to get past this?
Here is my code:
CGRect frame = [self.messageView frame]; //get the frame size of parent view
self.messageView.frame = CGRectMake(frame.origin.x, frame.origin.y, frame.size.width, (lineHeight * count)); //increase it to fit the text
self.messageLabel.text = message;
[self.messageView setNeedsDisplay];
// [self.messageLabel sizeToFit]; this fixes the multiple line issue but now label is not centered in parent view

Set numberOfLines to 0, lineBreakMode to UILineBreakModeWordWrap, adjustsFontSizeToFitWidth to NO. Check if your text contains '\n'.

[self.messageLabel setNumberOfLines:0];
Source: apple docs

Related

How to resize NSTextView

I want to resize NSTextView accordingly to it's content. Initially its height equals one line height and if there's more then one line of text, I want to resize it to three line height.
The problem is TextContainer size is not affected when I resize text view.
Here is screenshot to better illustrate the problem.
Text view has red background color to distinguish from scroll view, and definitely its size changed. As you can see, part of the text that is on the second line is not displayed fully as if text container were smaller than text view
Here is code I use for resizing:
-(void)unfold {
NSScrollView *scrollView = (NSScrollView *)self.superview.superview;
NSRect scrollFrame = scrollView.frame;
NSRect textFrame = self.frame;
scrollFrame.size.height=62;
scrollFrame.origin.y-=40;
textFrame.size.height=60;
self.superview.superview.frame = scrollFrame;
self.frame=textFrame;
}
I also tried to play around with text container setHeightTracksTextView or changing its size but it wouldn't work.

sizeWithFont:constrainedToSize doesn't work with custom font

I'm trying to resize a UITextView to the size the text within it.
The problem is that Im using a custom font and it the text doesnt fit within the UITextView.
NSString *textToFit = #"pretty long text";
UIFont *customFont = [UIFont fontWithName:#"Museo-100" size:15];
CGSize sizeText = [textToFit sizeWithFont:customFont constrainedToSize:CGSizeMake(textFrame.size.width, 1000)];
Where textFrame is the frame of the UITextView I want to adjust its height.
Im trying different fonts and also different files of the same font and still it never adjusts its height to the height that the text fills.
I've been searching and I dont find a solution. I've tried a workaround using a UILabel and the method textRectForBounds, but still no success, something on this lines.
UILabel *auxLabel = [[UILabel alloc]init];
auxLabel.numberOfLines = 0;
auxLabel.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"Museo-100" size:15];
auxLabel.text = //THE TEXT I WANT TO FIT IN
CGRect textSize = CGRectMake(0.0, 0.0, textDescription.frame.size.width, FLT_MAX);
CGRect frame = [auxLabel textRectForBounds:textSize limitedToNumberOfLines:0];
I think
UIView : sizeToFit
Should solve your problem.
sizeToFit Resizes and moves the receiver view so it just encloses its
subviews.
Discussion: Call this method when you want to resize the current view so that it uses the most appropriate amount of space.
Specific UIKit views resize themselves according to their own internal
needs. In some cases, if a view does not have a superview, it may size
itself to the screen bounds. Thus, if you want a given view to size
itself to its parent view, you should add it to the parent view before
calling this method.
https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/documentation/uikit/reference/uiview_class/uiview/uiview.html#//apple_ref/occ/instm/UIView/sizeToFit

How to find the position of the last text line in a multiline UILabel or otherwise have UILabel have 0 padding

I have a UILabel that has both -numberOfLines set to 3 and text-size auto shrink and I need to align another UIView to this UILabel's last line of text. That is, I might need to align to the y position of line 0, 1 or 2, depending on the text inside the label (and the distance between these lines of text may vary depending on whether the text is long enough that it triggered font resizing).
But:
UILabel doesn't expose a contentSize
the label's bounds extend past the last line of text (there seems to be a content inset), so aligning to the bounds won't work.
subclassing UILabel and doing something like this:
- (void)drawTextInRect:(CGRect)rect {
UIEdgeInsets insets = {0., 0., -30., 0.};
return [super drawTextInRect:UIEdgeInsetsInsetRect(rect, insets)];
}
just happens to work for the case where I have 3 lines and the font size was auto shrunk, but I still can'r figure out a generic way of subtracting insets for the general case, regardless of text size. And I don't seem to be able to use -boundingRectWithSize:options:context: either: it either returns a single line equivalent rect or, If I play around with the options, a a rect the same size of the original label (that is, including the extra insets I'm trying to get rid of). Mind you, the idea behind removing any insets is that if I have no way of knowing where the last line of text is, at least I can remove any insets in the label so that the last line of text aligns with the label's bounds.origin.y + bounds.size.height.
Any thoughts?
I don't know if the problem was that originally I was using boundingRectWithSize on non-attributed text or what but now this seems to work:
NSString *text = <get text from CoreData>;
NSAttributedString *attributedText = [[NSAttributedString alloc] initWithString:text attributes:#{NSFontAttributeName: self.titleLabel.font}];
CGRect rect = [attributedText boundingRectWithSize:self.titleLabel.frame.size
options:NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin
context:nil];
if (!rect.size.height || rect.size.height > self.titleLabel.frame.size.height) {
attributedText = [[NSAttributedString alloc] initWithString:text attributes:#{NSFontAttributeName: [UIFont boldSystemFontOfSize:self.titleLabel.font.pointSize * self.titleLabel.minimumScaleFactor]}];
rect = [attributedText boundingRectWithSize:self.titleLabel.frame.size
options:NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin
context:nil];
}
self.titleLabel.frame = rect;
self.titleLabel.attributedText = attributedText;
While this doesn't really find the position of the bottom of the last line of text in the UILabel (the label still adds some padding at the bottom... not sure if to account for descenders), it adjusts the label's bounds close enough to the bottom that I can at least align based on bounds.origin.y + bounds.size.height and it looks good enough.

find the location {x,y} of text in uilabel

I have a string coming from server which I am displaying on UILabel multiligne. It is within that string, I am identifying some particular substring. I want to place a button on that substring(button will be a subview of UILabel). For this I require substring coordinates. I went through this but I am not able to understand it. Suppose my complete string is abc, 567-324-6554, New York. I want 567-324-6554 to be displayed on button for which I need its coordinates.
How can I use above link to find coordinates of substring?
Thanks,
UILabel doesn't have any methods for doing this. You can do it with UITextView, because it implements the UITextInput protocol. You will want to set the text view's editable property to NO.
Something like this untested code should work:
- (CGRect)rectInTextView:(UITextView *)textView stringRange:(CFRange)stringRange {
UITextPosition *begin = [textView positionFromPosition:textView.beginningOfDocument offset:stringRange.location];
UITextPosition *end = [textView positionFromPosition:begin offset:stringRange.length];
UITextRange *textRange = [textView textRangeFromPosition:begin toPosition:end];
return [textView firstRectForRange:textRange];
}
That should return a CGRect (in the text view's coordinate system) that covers the substring specified by stringRange. You can set the button's frame to this rectangle, if you make the button a subview of the text view.
If the substring spans multiple lines, the rectangle will only cover the first line.

How to make height of OHAttributedLabel scale with content height?

I use an OHAttributedLabel called demoLbl for displaying text with formatted areas. This label is laid out with Interface Builder and is connected to a property in my ViewController. After setting the attributedText to the label I want all the text to be displayed in the label.
If I don't resize the label then the text is cropped at the end of the label so the rest of the text is missing.
If I use [demoLbl sizeToFit]; then the height of the label is larger or smaller in height than the text (about 10 point, varying with the text's length) thus giving me blank areas at the bottom of my view (after scrolling) plus the width of the label is increased by about 2 points.
If I calculate the height of the original text (NSString) before putting it in a NSAttributedString and adding it to the label's attributedText property then the calculated height is way too small for setting it as the label's height.
Is there a hack or trick I can apply so that the label's height is adjusted according to the NSAttributedString's height?
PS: To be more specific I wanted to add OHAttributedLabel as a tag but it's not allowed to me yet.
I'm the author of OHattributedLabel.
I made some fixes recently about my computation of the size. Please check it out it will probably solve your issue.
I also added a method named sizeConstrainedToSize:fitRange: in NSAttributedString+Attributes.h that returns the CGSize of a given NSAttributedString (quite the same way UIKit's sizeWithFont:constrainedToSize: works, but for Attributed strings and CoreText and not plain stings an UIKit)
Actually OHAttributedLabel's sizeThatFits: calls this method itself now.
You can see if this category gives you a more reliable height.
https://gist.github.com/1071565
Usage
attrLabel.frame.size.height = [attrLabel.attributedString boundingHeightForWidth:attrLabel.frame.size.width];
I added this code to the implementation of the OHAttributedLabel class:
// Toni Soler - 02/09/2011
// Overridden of the UILabel::sizeToFit method
- (void)sizeToFit
{
// Do not call the standard method of the UILabel class, this resizes the frame incorrectly
//[super sizeToFit];
CGSize constraint = CGSizeMake(self.frame.size.width, 20000.0f);
CGRect frame = self.frame;
frame.size = [self sizeThatFits:constraint];
[self setFrame:frame];
}
// End Toni Soler - 02/09/2011
Thank you Olivier for sharing your code!