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I have a UIView that I'd like to add several bits of text to. I have used a UITextView but I think that's overkill as it doesn't need to be editable. I thought about using a UILabel or a UITextField, but I don't see how you tell the superview where to position the UILabel or UITextField within itself. I want the lowest footprint object that will let me put text of a font/color/size of my choosing in my UIView where I want it. Not too much to ask, eh?

7 Answers 7

63

The simplest approach for you would be:

UILabel *yourLabel = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(10, 10, 300, 20)];

[yourLabel setTextColor:[UIColor blackColor]];
[yourLabel setBackgroundColor:[UIColor clearColor]];
[yourLabel setFont:[UIFont fontWithName: @"Trebuchet MS" size: 14.0f]]; 
[yourSuperView addSubview:yourLabel];

Building or populating Views in your code will probably require you to use CGRectMake a lot. As its name says, it creates a rectangle that you can use to set the relative position (relative to the borders of your superview) and size of your UIView-Subclass (in this case a UILabel).

It works like this:

yourLabel.Frame = CGRectMake(x, y, width, height); //x,y,width,height are float values.

x defines the spacing between the left hand border of the superview and the beginning of the subview your about to add, same applies to y but relating to the spacing between top-border of your superview. then width and height are self-explanatory i think.

Hope this gets you on the track.

3
  • 1
    I looked up both UILabel and UITextField in the documentation and see that they inherit from... UITextField : UIControl : UIView : UIResponder : NSObject UILabel : UIView : UIResponder : NSObject So I'm guessing that since they both inherit from UIView, that they have all the properties that UIView has? ...plus the extras they pick up along the way? This makes sense, but in the documentation for UILabel, Apple doesn't list any methods other than - (void)drawTextInRect:(CGRect)rect and - (CGRect)textRectForBounds:(CGRect)bounds
    – Steve
    Jul 9, 2010 at 15:05
  • (Comment boxes are too small for wordy people like me...) Am I safe to assume that I have access to all properties of every superclass up the chain to NSObject for any class I use? Thanks for the help, it's appreciated!
    – Steve
    Jul 9, 2010 at 15:05
  • yep you're correct, this is exactly how inheritance works. I still don't get what you want to achieve with drawTextInRect etc. A UILabel (Or a UITextview for that matter) are Views that provide you with functionality that allows you to set text in a very easy way. Maybe I just don't see the problem here :).
    – samsam
    Jul 14, 2010 at 9:19
8

Instead of finding a way to tell the view where to position the UILabel, you can tell the UILabel where to position itself in the view by using "center".

E.g.

myLabel.center = CGPointMake(0.0, 0.0);

Hope you'll be able to use UILabel, for me it's the basic form of a flexible non editable text.

2
  • Thanks - a nice, succinct way to put it. Am I correct in thinking that things like UILabel carry less overhead than a full UIView? Now that I (think I) realize that it inherits from UIView, is this a faulty assumption?
    – Steve
    Jul 9, 2010 at 14:49
  • 1
    Steve, I think you're a perfectionist and that's good. But our line of thinking is quite different, UILabel is already there for you as a convenience, fully tested. UIView is doing it in a lower-level way. Yes it may mean less overhead, faster, less memory usage, but with the effort and bugs that can occur, is it worth it? I suggest use UILabel if it satisfies your needs, unless you'll be displaying thousands of them then you can rethink your strategy of using a more efficient way of doing things.
    – Manny
    Jul 10, 2010 at 2:11
4

For Swift:

    let yourLabel = UILabel(frame: CGRectMake(100, 100, 100, 100))
    yourLabel.textColor = UIColor.whiteColor()
    yourLabel.backgroundColor = UIColor.blackColor()
    yourLabel.text = "mylabel text"
    yoursuperview.addSubview(yourLabel)
1
  • for swift 3 only change UILabel syntax to UILabel(frame: CGRect(x:100, y:100, width:100, height:100)) Mar 17, 2017 at 21:03
2

This question is old, but for a pure UIView text option without using UILabel or UITextField (as all the other answers describe, but the question is how to do it without them), drawRect in a subclassed UIView works for me. Like so:

 - (void)drawRect:(CGRect)rect{
     NSString *string = @"Hello World!";
     [string drawAtPoint:CGPointMake(100, 100) withFont:[UIFont boldSystemFontOfSize:16.0]];
 }
2
  • 1
    I take this back now -- Actually this is discouraged from iOS 7, Apple says "Many drawing additions to the NSString class are deprecated in favor of newer variants." meaning drawAtPoint:WithFont is not the best way to draw a nsstring into Uiview.
    – july
    Jun 12, 2013 at 0:35
  • You can use - (void)drawAtPoint:(CGPoint)point withAttributes:(NSDictionary *)attrs NS_AVAILABLE_IOS(7_0); for iOs7 and later
    – goelectric
    Sep 24, 2013 at 13:11
1

This routine displays a text at a X-Y position

-(void)placeText:(NSString *)theText:(int)theX:(int)theY {
    UILabel *textLabel;

    // Set font and calculate used space
    UIFont *textFont = [UIFont fontWithName:@"Helvetica" size:14];
    CGSize textStringSize = [theText sizeWithFont:textFont constrainedToSize:CGSizeMake(300,50) lineBreakMode:NSLineBreakByTruncatingTail];

    // Position of the text
    textLabel = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(theX+OFFSETIMAGEX-(textStringSize.width/2), theY+OFFSETIMAGEY-(textStringSize.height/2), textStringSize.width,textStringSize.height)];

    // Set text attributes
    textLabel.textColor = [UIColor blackColor];
    textLabel.backgroundColor = [UIColor orangeColor];
    textLabel.font = textFont;
    textLabel.text = theText;

    // Display text
    [self.view addSubview:textLabel];
}
1

It might be late but here is what I use:-

CGRect labelFrame = CGRectMake(120,300, 530, 100);
UILabel *myLabel = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:labelFrame];
//If you need to change the color
[myLabel setTextColor:[UIColor whiteColor]];
//If you need to change the system font
[myLabel setFont:[UIFont fontWithName:NULL size:23]];
//If you need alignment
[myLabel setTextAlignment:NSTextAlignmentCenter];
// The label will use an unlimited number of lines
[myLabel setNumberOfLines:0];
//Add label view to current view
[self.view addSubview:myLabel];
NSString *someString = @"Sample String, Yarp!";
myLabel.text = someString;
0

add a UILabel to your View. then override the View's layoutSubviews method.

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