jimmya / AttributedTextView

Easiest way to create an attributed UITextView with support for multiple links.

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AttributedTextView

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Version Swift Package Manager Carthage compatible ![Language](https://img.shields.io/badge/language-swift 3-f48041.svg?style=flat) Platform License

Git Twitter ![LinkedIn](https://img.shields.io/badge/linkedin-Edwin Vermeer-blue.svg?style=flat) Website [eMail](mailto:edwin@evict.nl?SUBJECT=About EVReflection)

Easiest way to create an attributed UITextView with support for multiple links.

See the demo app and the playground for detailed information how to use AttributedTextView

Requirements

  • iOS 8.0+
  • Xcode 8.0+

Usage

General usage

In interfacebuilder put an UITextView on the canvas and set the base class to AttributedTextView and create a referencing outlet to the a property in your viewController. In the samples below we have called this property textView1. Always assign to the attributer property when you want to set something.

Paragraph styling

You do have to be aware that the paragraph functions will only be applied after calling the .paragraphApplyStyling function. On start the paragraph styling will use default styling. After each range change (what happens after .all, .match* or .append) the styling will be reset to the default.

The active range

Styling will always be applied on the active range. When executing a function on a string, then that complete string will become the active range. If you use .append to add an other string, then that latest string will become the active range. When using the + sign then that will replaced by an appent on 2 Attributer objects. All functions on those objects will first be performed before the append will be executed. So if you do an .all then still only one of the strings will be tha active range.

For instance here all text will be size 20

("red".red + "blue".blue).all.size(20)

And here only the text blue will be size 20

"red".red + "blue".blue.all.size(20)

And like this all text will be size 20

"red".red.append("blue").blue.all.size(20)

Sample code

Here is a sample of some basic functions:

textView1.attributer =
    "1. ".red
    .append("This is the first test. ").green
    .append("Click on ").black
    .append("evict.nl").makeInteract { _ in
        UIApplication.shared.open(URL(string: "http://evict.nl")!, options: [:], completionHandler: { completed in })
    }.underline
    .append(" for testing links. ").black
    .append("Next test").underline.makeInteract { _ in
        print("NEXT")
    }
    .all.font(UIFont(name: "SourceSansPro-Regular", size: 16))
    .setLinkColor(UIColor.purple) 

animated

Some more attributes and now using + instead of .append:

textView1.attributer =
    "2. red, ".red.underline.underline(0x00ff00)
    + "green, ".green.fontName("Helvetica").size(30)
    + "cyan, ".cyan.size(22)
    + "orange, ".orange.kern(10)
    + "blue, ".blue.strikethrough(3).baselineOffset(8)
    + "black.".shadow(color: UIColor.gray, offset: CGSize(width: 2, height: 3), blurRadius: 3.0)

animated

A match and matchAll sample:

textView1.attributer = "It is this or it is that where the word is is selected".size(20)
    .match("is").underline.underline(UIColor.red)
    .matchAll("is").strikethrough(4)

animated

A hashtags and mentions sample:

textView1.attributer = "@test: What #hashtags do we have in @evermeer #AtributedTextView library"
    .matchHashtags.underline
    .matchMentions
    .makeInteract { link in
        UIApplication.shared.open(URL(string: "https://twitter.com\(link.replacingOccurrences(of: "@", with: ""))")!, options: [:], completionHandler: { completed in })
    }

animated

Some other text formating samples:

textView1.attributer =  (
    "test stroke".strokeWidth(2).strokeColor(UIColor.red)
    + "test stroke 2\n".strokeWidth(2).strokeColor(UIColor.blue)
    + "test strikethrough".strikethrough(2).strikethroughColor(UIColor.red)
    + " test strikethrough 2\n".strikethrough(2).strikethroughColor(UIColor.yellow)
    + "letterpress ".letterpress
    + " obliquenes\n".obliqueness(0.4).backgroundColor(UIColor.cyan)
    + "expansion\n".expansion(0.8)
    ).all.size(24)

animated

Paragraph formatting:

textView1.attributer = (
    "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.\nPack my box with five dozen liquor jugs.\nSeveral fabulous dixieland jazz groups played with quick tempo.".paragraphLineHeightMultiple(5).paragraphLineSpacing(6).paragraphMinimumLineHeight(15).paragraphMaximumLineHeight(50).paragraphLineSpacing(10).paragraphLineBreakModeWordWrapping.paragraphFirstLineHeadIndent(20).paragraphApplyStyling
    ).all.size(12)

Use the attributedText functionality on a UILabel

You can also use the Attributer for your UILabel. You only can't use the makeInteract function:

let myUILabel = UILabel()
myUILabel.attributedText = ("Just ".red + "some ".green + "text.".orange).string

Extending AttributedTextView

In the demo app you can see how you can extend the AttributedTextView with a custom property / function that will perform multiple actions. Here is a simple sample that will show you how you can create a myTitle property that will set multiple attributes:

extension Attributer {
    open var myTitle: Attributer {
        get {
            return self.fontName("Arial").size(28).color(0xffaa66).kern(5)
        }
    }
}

public extension String {
    var myTitle: Attributer {
        get {
            return attributer.myTitle
        }
    }
}

Decorating the Attributed object

In the demo app there is also a sample that shows you how you could decorate an Attributed object with default styling.

        attributedTextView.attributer = decorate(4) { content in return content
            + "This is our custom title".myTitle
        }

The decorate function can then look something like this:

    func decorate(_ id: Int, _ builder: ((_ content: Attributer) -> Attributer)) -> Attributer {
        var b = "Sample \(id + 1):\n\n".red
        b = builder(b) // Now add the content
        return b
    }

Installation

CocoaPods

CocoaPods is a dependency manager for Cocoa projects. You can install it with the following command:

$ gem install cocoapods

CocoaPods 1.1.0+ is required to build AttributedTextView 0.1.0+.

To integrate AttributedTextView into your Xcode project using CocoaPods, specify it in your Podfile:

source 'https://github.com/CocoaPods/Specs.git'
platform :ios, '8.0'
use_frameworks!

pod 'AttributedTextView', '~> 0.1.0'

Then, run the following command:

$ pod install

Carthage

Carthage is a decentralized dependency manager that automates the process of adding frameworks to your Cocoa application.

You can install Carthage with Homebrew using the following command:

$ brew update
$ brew install carthage

To integrate AttributedTextView into your Xcode project using Carthage, specify it in your Cartfile:

github "AttributedTextView/AttributedTextView" ~> 0.1.0

Swift Package Manager

To use AttributedTextView as a Swift Package Manager package just add the following in your Package.swift file.

import PackageDescription

let package = Package(
name: "HelloAttributedTextView",
dependencies: [
.Package(url: "https://github.com/evermeer/AttributedTextView.git", "0.1.0")
]
)

Manually

If you prefer not to use either of the aforementioned dependency managers, you can integrate AttributedTextView into your project manually.

Git Submodules

  • Open up Terminal, cd into your top-level project directory, and run the following command "if" your project is not initialized as a git repository:
$ git init
  • Add AttributedTextView as a git submodule by running the following command:
$ git submodule add https://github.com/evermeer/AttributedTextView.git
$ git submodule update --init --recursive
  • Open the new AttributedTextView folder, and drag the AttributedTextView.xcodeproj into the Project Navigator of your application's Xcode project.

It should appear nested underneath your application's blue project icon. Whether it is above or below all the other Xcode groups does not matter.

  • Select the AttributedTextView.xcodeproj in the Project Navigator and verify the deployment target matches that of your application target.
  • Next, select your application project in the Project Navigator (blue project icon) to navigate to the target configuration window and select the application target under the "Targets" heading in the sidebar.
  • In the tab bar at the top of that window, open the "General" panel.
  • Click on the + button under the "Embedded Binaries" section.
  • You will see two different AttributedTextView.xcodeproj folders each with two different versions of the AttributedTextView.framework nested inside a Products folder.

It does not matter which Products folder you choose from.

  • Select the AttributedTextView.framework.

  • And that's it!

The AttributedTextView.framework is automagically added as a target dependency, linked framework and embedded framework in a copy files build phase which is all you need to build on the simulator and a device.

Embeded Binaries

  • Download the latest release from https://github.com/evermeer/AttributedTextView/releases
  • Next, select your application project in the Project Navigator (blue project icon) to navigate to the target configuration window and select the application target under the "Targets" heading in the sidebar.
  • In the tab bar at the top of that window, open the "General" panel.
  • Click on the + button under the "Embedded Binaries" section.
  • Add the downloaded AttributedTextView.framework.
  • And that's it!

License

AttributedTextView is released under the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.

My other libraries:

Also see my other public source iOS libraries:

  • EVReflection - Swift library with reflection functions with support for NSCoding, Printable, Hashable, Equatable and JSON
  • EVCloudKitDao - Simplified access to Apple's CloudKit
  • EVFaceTracker - Calculate the distance and angle of your device with regards to your face in order to simulate a 3D effect
  • EVURLCache - a NSURLCache subclass for handling all web requests that use NSURLReques
  • AlamofireJsonToObject - An Alamofire extension which converts JSON response data into swift objects using EVReflection
  • AlamofireXmlToObject - An Alamofire extension which converts XML response data into swift objects using EVReflection and XMLDictionary
  • AlamofireOauth2 - A swift implementation of OAuth2 using Alamofire
  • EVWordPressAPI - Swift Implementation of the WordPress (Jetpack) API using AlamofireOauth2, AlomofireJsonToObjects and EVReflection (work in progress)
  • PassportScanner - Scan the MRZ code of a passport and extract the firstname, lastname, passport number, nationality, date of birth, expiration date and personal numer.
  • AttributedTextView - Easiest way to create an attributed UITextView with support for multiple links.

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Easiest way to create an attributed UITextView with support for multiple links.

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