i have UILabel (cocoa touch framework) and i want to right and left justify its text. as a consequence it will stretch the text inside.

Example: like if i had this text "While the saved costs of physical manufacturing and shipping" it would appear like the following:

"While the saved"
"c o s t s   o f"
"p h y s i c a l"
 "manufacturing"
"a n d  shipping"

as you can see left and right justification...

how can i achieve that ???

many thanks

  • i'm sorry i had to put the double qoutations to post the question.
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try this...youLable.textAlignment = UITextAlignmentLeft. if you have already done that then post code you wrote to set text on label. – Learner Sep 11 '11 at 13:21
it didn't work. UITextAlignmentRight and UITextAlignmentCenter didn't work either. – M.Saleh Sep 11 '11 at 13:23
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6 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

You should use my OHAttributedLabel class.

It has everything needed to display an NSAttributedString, including justifying left, center, right… and justified, and is really simple to use.

You can find it here on github. See the sample code provided that also shows how to change text justification.

// suppose that label is an IBOutlet to an OHAttributedLabel (subclass oh UILabel)
label.textAlignment = UITextAlignmentJustify; // and that's all, OHAttributedLabel does everything needed for you!

(Note: UItextAlignmentJustify is a constant defined in OHAttributedLabel headers taht matches corresponding CoreText constant for justify alignment. This constant does not exists in Apple's SDK)

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This is so called "full justification", but isn't supported by the UILabel system (which only has "alignments" - left, right and centre). If you want this, you'll have to code it up yourself, building a control with CoreText or similar.

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is there any source or library have done such a thing ?? – M.Saleh Sep 11 '11 at 13:22
There probably is, but I'm not aware of one. – Adam Wright Sep 11 '11 at 13:24
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Your best bet is to use a UIWebView and do it in html. This solution should be fine if you have to use it only in one paragraph for example, otherwise you'll have to build your custom subsclass.

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Agree that this can only be done with a good bit of custom coding; which I would think will be some pretty heavy stuff. Before you get into that; and this is depending on your requirement; do consider having a UIWebView where I imagine you would be able to manage text styles and alignments with a bit more freedom using some HTML and CSS coding.

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actaully i was using UIWebView and decided to make it as UILabel because of UIWebView heavy loading. – M.Saleh Sep 11 '11 at 13:39
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The following works as a quick fix, but note that for anything more than black plain text you'll need some styling or css.

(From: Justified Alignment in UITextView - iPhone)

I have come to a solution that works. First of all, you will need to change your UITextView and use a UIWebView instead.

    Details.h

    @interface Details : UIViewController {
    IBOutlet UIWebView *descripcion;
    }

    @property (nonatomic, retain) UITextView *descripcion;

Then, load your UIWebView as follows:

    Details.m

    [descripcion loadHTMLString:[NSString stringWithFormat:@"<div align='justify'>%@<div>",YOUR_TEXT] baseURL:nil];
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Using UIWebView can be slow, so if that's an issue CoreText is the way to go.

Here's some code that uses core text to display an attributed string on a view. It indents a bit like UILabel. I've left some other paragraph formatting options in to illustrate how you can set other paragraph properties and also set the attributed string to bold. Remember you'll need to add the CoreText framework otherwise you'll get build errors.

This code doesn't full justify the last line. Not sure you can get this for free in CoreText.

the .h file

//
//  SmartLabel.h
//

#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
#import <CoreText/CoreText.h> // needed for CTFontRef, CTFontCreateWithName

@interface SmartLabel : UIView
{
    NSMutableAttributedString* _pgSmartString;
}

@property (nonatomic, retain) NSMutableAttributedString* smartString;

- (void) setText: (NSString*) string;
- (void) formatString;

@end

And the .m file

//
//  SmartLabel.m
//

#import "SmartLabel.h"

@implementation SmartLabel

@synthesize smartString = _pgSmartString;

- (void)dealloc
{
    [_pgSmartString release];
    [super dealloc];
}

- (id)initWithFrame:(CGRect)frame;
{
    if ((self = [super initWithFrame:frame]))
    {
        [self setBackgroundColor: [UIColor clearColor]];
    }
    return self;
}


- (void)drawRect:(CGRect)rect
{
    CGContextRef graphicsContext = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();
    CGContextSetTextMatrix(graphicsContext, CGAffineTransformIdentity);

    // turns things right way up
    CGContextTranslateCTM(graphicsContext, 0, self.bounds.size.height);
    CGContextScaleCTM(graphicsContext, 1.0, -1.0);

    CTFramesetterRef framesetter = CTFramesetterCreateWithAttributedString((CFAttributedStringRef)[self smartString]);

    CGRect bounds = [self bounds];
    bounds.origin.x = bounds.origin.x + 8;
    bounds.size.width = bounds.size.width - 16;

    CGMutablePathRef path = CGPathCreateMutable();
    CGPathAddRect(path, NULL, bounds);

    CTFrameRef frame = CTFramesetterCreateFrame(framesetter, CFRangeMake(0, [[self smartString] length]), path, NULL);
    CFRelease(path);

    CTFrameDraw(frame, graphicsContext); 
    CFRelease(frame);
    CFRelease(framesetter);
}


- (void) setText: (NSString*) string;
{
    NSMutableAttributedString* attributedString = [[NSMutableAttributedString alloc] initWithString:string];
    [self setSmartString:attributedString];
    [attributedString release];
    [self formatString];
}


- (void) formatString;
{
    CTTextAlignment alignment = kCTJustifiedTextAlignment; // could put different alignments here

    CGFloat paragraphSpacing = 11.0;
    CGFloat paragraphSpacingBefore = 0.0;
    CGFloat firstLineHeadIndent = 0.0;
    CGFloat headIndent = 0.0;

    CTParagraphStyleSetting altSettings[] = 
    {
        { kCTParagraphStyleSpecifierAlignment, sizeof(CTTextAlignment), &alignment},
        { kCTParagraphStyleSpecifierFirstLineHeadIndent, sizeof(CGFloat), &firstLineHeadIndent},
        { kCTParagraphStyleSpecifierHeadIndent, sizeof(CGFloat), &headIndent},
        { kCTParagraphStyleSpecifierParagraphSpacing, sizeof(CGFloat), &paragraphSpacing},
        { kCTParagraphStyleSpecifierParagraphSpacingBefore, sizeof(CGFloat), &paragraphSpacingBefore},
    }; 

    CTParagraphStyleRef style;
    style = CTParagraphStyleCreate( altSettings, sizeof(altSettings) / sizeof(CTParagraphStyleSetting) );

    if ( style == NULL )
    {
        NSLog(@"***  WARNING *** Unable To Create CTParagraphStyle in apply paragraph formatting" );
        return;
    }

    [[self smartString] addAttributes:[NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:(NSObject*)style,(NSString*) kCTParagraphStyleAttributeName, nil] range:NSMakeRange(0,[[self smartString] length])];

    CFRelease(style);

    UIFont* boldFont = [UIFont boldSystemFontOfSize:12.0];

    CTFontRef boldCoreTextFontReference =  CTFontCreateWithName ((CFStringRef)[boldFont fontName],[boldFont pointSize], NULL);
    [[self smartString] addAttributes:[NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:(NSObject*)boldCoreTextFontReference,(NSString*) kCTFontAttributeName, nil] range:NSMakeRange(0,[[self smartString] length])];
}

@end

And to put to use, something like this:

SmartLabel* smartLabel = [[SmartLabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(20, 120, 90, 140.0)];
[[self window] addSubview:smartLabel];
[smartLabel setText:@"While the saved costs of physical manufacturing and shipping"];
[smartLabel release];
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