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Build Status Platform CocoaPods Compatible Carthage Compatible

Texty

Texty's goal is to make styling text clean and easy. This is accomplished using things like style containers, styled label initializers, and string styling via XML-like tags.

Created and maintained by Vectorform, LLC.

Requirements:

  • iOS 13.0+
  • Xcode 10.0+
  • Swift 5.0+

Installation

CocoaPods

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

$ gem install cocoapods

CocoaPods 1.0.0+ is required to build Texty.

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

source 'https://github.com/CocoaPods/Specs.git'
platform :ios, '10.0'
use_frameworks!

target '<Your Target Name>' do
    pod 'Texty', '~> 0.2.6'
end

Then, run the following command:

$ pod install

Carthage

Carthage is a decentralized dependency manager that builds your dependencies and provides you with binary frameworks.

You can install Carthage with Homebrew using the following command:

$ brew update
$ brew install carthage

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

github "Vectorform/Texty" ~> 0.2.7

Run carthage update to build the framework and drag the built Texty.framework into your Xcode project.

Manually

If you prefer not to use any of the listed dependency managers, you can integrate Texty into your project manually.


Usage

Creating styles

The TextStyle class was designed to be created once and reused across your entire application. If you need to manipulate a TextStyle without affecting the original, you'll need to use the copy initializer UITextStyle(with: TextStyle)

/// Create static references to reusable styles
struct Style {
    static let Header1: TextStyle = TextStyle(attributes: [.foregroundColor : UIColor.black, .font : UIFont.boldSystemFont(ofSize: 24.0)])

    static let Header2: TextStyle = TextStyle(attributes: [.foregroundColor : UIColor.black, .font : UIFont.boldSystemFont(ofSize: 20.0)])

    static let Normal: TextStyle = TextStyle(attributes: [.foregroundColor : UIColor.black, .font : UIFont.systemFont(ofSize: 17.0)])

    static let Underline: TextStyle = TextStyle(attributes: [TextAttribute.underlineStyle : NSUnderlineStyle.styleSingle])
}
/// Reuse your defined styles across your entire application
class ViewController: UIViewController {
    private let headerLabel: TextyLabel = TextyLabel(style: Style.Header1)
    private let textLabel: TextyLabel = TextyLabel(style: Style.Normal)
}

Available attributes

TextAttribute Expected Type Native Equivalent
attachment NSTextAttachment NSAttributedStringKey.attachment
backgroundColor UIColor NSAttributedStringKey.backgroundColor
baselineOffset NSNumber NSAttributedStringKey.baselineOffset
expansion NSNumber NSAttributedStringKey.expansion
font UIFont NSAttributedStringKey.font
foregroundColor UIColor NSAttributedStringKey.foregroundColor
kern NSNumber NSAttributedStringKey.kern
ligature NSNumber NSAttributedStringKey.ligature
link NSURL or NSString NSAttributedStringKey.link
obliqueness NSNumber NSAttributedStringKey.obliqueness
paragraphStyle NSParagraphStyle NSAttributedStringKey.paragraphStyle
shadow NSShadow NSAttributedStringKey.shadow
strikethroughColor UIColor NSAttributedStringKey.strikethroughColor
strikethroughStyle NSNumber NSAttributedStringKey.strikethroughStyle
strokeColor UIColor NSAttributedStringKey.strokeColor
strokeWidth NSNumber NSAttributedStringKey.strokeWidth
textEffect NSString NSAttributedStringKey.textEffect
underlineColor UIColor NSAttributedStringKey.underlineColor
underlineStyle NSNumber NSAttributedStringKey.underlineStyle
verticalGlyphForm NSNumber NSAttributedStringKey.verticalGlyphForm
writingDirection Array<NSNumber> NSAttributedStringKey.writingDirection

More information about each attribute can be found in Apple's documentation.

TextyLabel

TextyLabel is a subclass of UILabel created specifically to work with TextStyle objects. The core power of TextyLabel comes from its initializer. TextyLabel will create a copy of the TextStyle object.

let titleLabel: TextyLabel = TextyLabel(style: Style.Header1)

You can manipulate or replace the style later using the style property.

Be careful when subclassing TextyLabel as some properties are overriden to be referenced from the associated style object rather than their native locations.

Subclassing TextyLabel and overriding one of these properties without calling the super class will result in undefined behavior.

Property Overriden Target
font style.font
lineBreakMode style.paragraphStyle.lineBreakMode
text attributedText
textAlignment style.paragraphStyle.alignment
textColor style.foregroundColor

TextyButton

TextyButton is a subclass of UIButton created specifically to work with TextStyle objects. TextyButton can be initialized in the same way as TextyLabel. Internally this will be used as the style for all button states. TextyButton will create a copy of the TextStyle object.

let button: TextyButton = TextyButton(style: Style.Header1)

You can manipulate or replace the styles later using the following functions:

style(for state: UIControlState)
setStyle(_ style: TextStyle, for state: UIControlState)

Be careful when subclassing TextyButton as some properties are overriden to be referenced from the associated style object rather than their native locations.

Subclassing TextyButton and overriding one of these properties without calling the super class will result in undefined behavior.

Function Overriden Target
setTitle(_ title: String?, for state: UIControlState) setAttributedTitle(_ title: NSAttributedString?, for state: UIControlState)
title(for state: UIControlState) attributedTitle(for: state)
setTitleColor(_ color: UIColor?, for state: UIControlState) style(for: state).foregroundColor
titleColor(for state: UIControlState) style(for: state).foregroundColor
setTitleShadowColor(_ color: UIColor?, for state: UIControlState) style(for: state).shadow
titleShadowColor(for state: UIControlState) style(for: state).shadow

TextyTextView

TextyTextView is a subclass of UITextView created specifically to work with TextStyle objects. The core power of TextyTextView comes from its initializer. TextyTextView will create a copy of the TextStyle object.

let titleLabel: TextyLabel = TextyLabel(style: Style.Header1)

TextyTextView does not currently support editing text so you should have isEditable set to false.

You can manipulate or replace the style later using the style property.

Be careful when subclassing TextyTextView as some properties are overriden to be referenced from the associated style object rather than their native locations.

Subclassing TextyTextView and overriding one of these properties without calling the super class will result in undefined behavior.

Property Overriden Target
font style.font
lineBreakMode style.paragraphStyle.lineBreakMode
text attributedText
textAlignment style.paragraphStyle.alignment
textColor style.foregroundColor

Styling text via tags

Texty provides the ability to style parts of a string using XML-like tags within the string.

let titleLabel: TextyLabel = TextyLabel(style: Style.Header1)
self.titleLabel.style.setStyle(Style.Underline, forTag: "underline")
self.titleLabel.text = "This is a <underline>TextyLabel</underline>"

You can also forego creating a TextStyle and use an attribute dictionary instead.

let titleLabel: TextyLabel = TextyLabel(style: Style.Header1)
self.titleLabel.style.setAttributes([TextAttribute.underlineStyle : NSUnderlineStyle.styleSingle.rawValue], forTag: "underline")
self.titleLabel.text = "This is a <underline>TextyLabel</underline>"

Unlike XML, tags do not have to be balanced. For example, the following string is valid (given that the bold and italic tags are defined):

This is <italic>an example <bold>string used</italic> for demonstration</bold> purposes.

It is important that your closing tags have the forward slash at the beginning and not the end.

Good Bad
</bold> <bold/>

Forward slashes at the end of a tag will cause the tag to be detected as a short tag, which will have a use in the future, but currently offers nothing.

There is currently no way to escape tags within a string - all tags will be stripped during the styling process.


Credits

Igor Efremov, [email protected]

Jeff Meador, [email protected]

License

Texty is available under the BSD-3-Clause License. See the LICENSE file for more info.