Is there any way开发者_运维技巧 to bold only part of a string? For example:
Approximate Distance: 120m away
Thanks!
What you could do is use an NSAttributedString
.
NSString *boldFontName = [[UIFont boldSystemFontOfSize:12] fontName];
NSString *yourString = ...;
NSRange boldedRange = NSMakeRange(22, 4);
NSMutableAttributedString *attrString = [[NSMutableAttributedString alloc] initWithString:yourString];
[attrString beginEditing];
[attrString addAttribute:kCTFontAttributeName
value:boldFontName
range:boldedRange];
[attrString endEditing];
//draw attrString here...
Take a look at this handy dandy guide to drawing NSAttributedString
objects with Core Text.
As Jacob mentioned, you probably want to use an NSAttributedString
or an NSMutableAttributedString
. The following is one example of how you might do this.
NSMutableAttributedString *string = [[NSMutableAttributedString alloc] initWithString:@"Approximate Distance: 120m away"];
NSRange selectedRange = NSMakeRange(22, 4); // 4 characters, starting at index 22
[string beginEditing];
[string addAttribute:NSFontAttributeName
value:[NSFont fontWithName:@"Helvetica-Bold" size:12.0]
range:selectedRange];
[string endEditing];
If you do not want to bother with fonts (as not every variation of font contains "Bold"), here is another way to do this. Please be aware, this is currently only available on OS X...:
NSMutableAttributedString *attrString = [[NSMutableAttributedString alloc] initWithString:"Approximate Distance: 120m away"];
[attrString beginEditing];
[attrString applyFontTraits:NSBoldFontMask
range:NSMakeRange(22, 4)];
[attrString endEditing];
The code above gave me crash when I created UILabel with this attributedString.
I used this code and it worked:
NSMutableAttributedString *attrString = [[NSMutableAttributedString alloc] initWithString:string];
NSRange boldedRange = NSMakeRange(0, 1);
UIFont *fontText = [UIFont systemFontOfSize:12]; //[UIFont fontWithName:@"Lato-Bold" size:12];
NSDictionary *dictBoldText = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:fontText, NSFontAttributeName, nil];
[attrString setAttributes:dictBoldText range:boldedRange];
Swift
Also includes getting the range of the string you want to embolden dynamically
let nameString = "Magoo"
let string = "Hello my name is \(nameString)"
let attributes = [NSFontAttributeName:UIFont.systemFontOfSize(14.0),NSForegroundColorAttributeName: UIColor.black]
let boldAttribute = [NSFontAttributeName:UIFont.boldSystemFontOfSize(14.0)]
let attributedString = NSMutableAttributedString(string: string, attributes: attributes)
let nsString = NSString(string: string)
let range = nsString.rangeOfString(nameString)
if range.length > 0 { attributedString.setAttributes(boldAttribute, range: range) }
someLabel.attributedText = attributedString
To bold a string without hardcoding its font, you can use the StrokeWidth attribute with a negative value:
let s = NSMutableAttributedString(string: "Approximate Distance: 120m away")
s.addAttribute(NSStrokeWidthAttributeName, value: NSNumber(value: -3.0), range: NSRange(22..<26))
An NSString
is just a data container. It doesn't contain any details about presentation concerns.
It sounds like what you probably want to do is bold part of the UILabel
that is being used to display your string. Which I don't think you can do. But you could always break the UI down into three labels, one for "Approximate Distance:", one for "120 m", and one for "away". Place them in-line with each other and you should get the desired effect.
Another option might be to use a UIWebView
and a little bit of markup to display your string with embedded formatting information, as discussed here:
http://iphoneincubator.com/blog/windows-views/display-rich-text-using-a-uiwebview
In Xamarin ios you can bold part of a NSString this way:
public static NSMutableAttributedString BoldRangeOfString (string str, float fontSize, int startRange, int lengthRange)
{
var firstAttributes = new UIStringAttributes {
Font = UIFont.BoldSystemFontOfSize(fontSize)
};
NSMutableAttributedString boldString = new NSMutableAttributedString (str);
boldString.SetAttributes (firstAttributes.Dictionary, new NSRange (startRange, lengthRange));
return boldString;
}
and call this method:
myLabel = new UILabel ();
...
myLabel.AttributedText = BoldRangeOfString("my text", fontSize, startRange, lengthRange);
I coupled @Jacob Relkin and @Andrew Marin answers, otherwise, I got the crashes. Here is the answer for iOS9:
UIFont *boldFont = [UIFont boldSystemFontOfSize:12];
NSString *yourString = @"Approximate Distance: 120m away";
NSRange boldedRange = NSMakeRange(22, 4);
NSMutableAttributedString *attrString = [[NSMutableAttributedString alloc] initWithString:yourString];
[attrString beginEditing];
[attrString addAttribute:NSFontAttributeName
value:boldFont
range:boldedRange];
[attrString endEditing];
I took a look at the official documentation: 1 and 2.
Shorter way using Swift5+
let labelNotes = UILabel() //or UITextView(), etc...
let attributedNotes = NSMutableAttributedString(string: "Bold: some stuff not bold")
attributedNotes.addAttribute(NSAttributedString.Key.font, value: UIFont.boldSystemFont(ofSize: 14), range: NSRange(location: 0, length: 5))
labelNotes.attributedText = attributedNotes
If you don't want to hardcode the font or/and the size try this code for bolding full strings:
NSMutableAttributedString *myString = [[NSMutableAttributedString alloc] initWithString:mainString];
[myString beginEditing];
[myString addAttribute:NSStrokeWidthAttributeName
value:[[NSNumber alloc] initWithInt: -3.f]
range:NSMakeRange(0, [mainString length])];
[myString endEditing];
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