This pod contains categories on NSAttributedString to add a lot of very useful convenience methods to manipulate attributed strings.
Convenience methods include:
- font manipulation (setFont:range:andfontAtIndex:effectiveRange:)
- text color (setTextColor:range:andtextColorAtIndex:effectiveRange:)
- background color
- bold, italics and underline styles
- add URLs to your text
- paragraph styles (indentation, line spacing, …)
- baseline adjustment, subscript, superscript, …
- And much more
It also contains:
- A category on UIFontto build a font given its postscript name and derive a bold/italic font from a standard one and vice-versa.
- A category on UILabelto make it easier to detect the character at a given coordinate, which is useful to detect if the user tapped on a link (if the character as a given tappedCGPointhas an associatedNSURL) and similar stuff
Note that for advanced URL detection, you should still prefer
UITextView(configuring it witheditable=NO) and its dedicated delegate methods instead of usingUILabel(which does not publicly expose itsNSLayoutManagerto properly compute the exact way its characters are laid out, forcing us to recreate the TextKit objects ourselves, contrary toUITextView).
The source code is fully commented and documentation is auto-generated here.
There is also some help pages in the repository's wiki.
The suggested installation is via CocoaPods. Simply add the following line to your Podfile:
pod 'OHAttributedStringAdditions'
Then do a pod install.
A demo project is provided in the repository. Don't hesitate to open Example/AttributedStringDemo.xcworkspace and play with it.
If you have CocoaPods, you can even try that Sample project even if you don't have cloned the project yet, by using pod try OHAttributedStringAdditions in your terminal.
- Improving documentation on edge cases, like documenting the behavior about when some attribute is not present or if we are allowed to pass nil to arguments.
- Adding support for OSX. This should only need little adjustments, like getting rid of the #import <UIKit/UIKit.h>in the pch file, or replacingUIColorandUIFontclasses withNSColorandNSFont(using macros to switch from one to another depending on the SDK), but that still requires some work and tests.
Note: The original code of these categories comes from my old
OHAttributedLabelpod, which is now deprecated as I don't have time to maintain it. As this previous implementation was based on CoreText and was not compatible (sometimes even crash) with UIKit/TextKit, I converted those categories to create this UIKit-compliantNSAttributedString, not related to CoreText andOHAttributedLabelanymore and that now work with latest versions of iOS/UIKit/TextKit.
This component is under the MIT Licence (See the LICENSE file).



