69

I am Copying the same Question asked Before Question. I have tried the solutions given and was not able to solve it since sizetofit was not effective when I use Autolayout.

first screenshot

The expected display is like below.

second screenshot

6
  • Does the label need to be so big? You should be using the hugging and compression settings.
    – Wain
    Feb 19, 2015 at 11:36
  • @Wain UILabel height is set to min 100px and max depends on the text inside. So when the text height is less than 100px, it is displayed on vertical center to the label. I need it to be on the top left.
    – MELWIN
    Feb 19, 2015 at 11:44
  • If you're open to it TTTAttributedLabel is an open source component that lets you set vertical alignment Feb 24, 2015 at 13:35
  • 1
    Possible duplicate of Vertically align text to top within a UILabel Nov 18, 2016 at 13:11
  • 1
    Hey, just give constraint to your label as top,bottom, leading, trailing. Open size inspector and set bottom constraint is equal to greater than. Make sure you have set the no.of lines to 0.
    – Amit Kumar
    Jul 22, 2017 at 12:24

17 Answers 17

135
+25

Edit

In my original answer I was using the paragraph style of the label. Turns out that for multi-line labels this actually prevents the label from being multi-line. As a result I removed it from the calculation. See more about this in Github

For those of you more comfortable with using Open Source definitely look at TTTAttributedLabel where you can set the label's text alignment to TTTAttributedLabelVerticalAlignmentTop


The trick is to subclass UILabel and override drawTextInRect. Then enforce that the text is drawn at the origin of the label's bounds.

Here's a naive implementation that you can use right now:

Swift

@IBDesignable class TopAlignedLabel: UILabel {
    override func drawTextInRect(rect: CGRect) {
        if let stringText = text {
            let stringTextAsNSString = stringText as NSString
            var labelStringSize = stringTextAsNSString.boundingRectWithSize(CGSizeMake(CGRectGetWidth(self.frame), CGFloat.max),
                options: NSStringDrawingOptions.UsesLineFragmentOrigin,
                attributes: [NSFontAttributeName: font],
                context: nil).size
            super.drawTextInRect(CGRectMake(0, 0, CGRectGetWidth(self.frame), ceil(labelStringSize.height)))
        } else {
            super.drawTextInRect(rect)
        }
    }
    override func prepareForInterfaceBuilder() {
        super.prepareForInterfaceBuilder()
        layer.borderWidth = 1
        layer.borderColor = UIColor.blackColor().CGColor
    }
}

Swift 3

  @IBDesignable class TopAlignedLabel: UILabel {
    override func drawText(in rect: CGRect) {
        if let stringText = text {
            let stringTextAsNSString = stringText as NSString
            let labelStringSize = stringTextAsNSString.boundingRect(with: CGSize(width: self.frame.width,height: CGFloat.greatestFiniteMagnitude),
                                                                            options: NSStringDrawingOptions.usesLineFragmentOrigin,
                                                                            attributes: [NSFontAttributeName: font],
                                                                            context: nil).size
            super.drawText(in: CGRect(x:0,y: 0,width: self.frame.width, height:ceil(labelStringSize.height)))
        } else {
            super.drawText(in: rect)
        }
    }
    override func prepareForInterfaceBuilder() {
        super.prepareForInterfaceBuilder()
        layer.borderWidth = 1
        layer.borderColor = UIColor.black.cgColor
    }
}

Objective-C

IB_DESIGNABLE
@interface TopAlignedLabel : UILabel

@end

@implementation TopAlignedLabel

- (void)drawTextInRect:(CGRect)rect {
    if (self.text) {
        CGSize labelStringSize = [self.text boundingRectWithSize:CGSizeMake(CGRectGetWidth(self.frame), CGFLOAT_MAX)
                                                         options:NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin | NSStringDrawingUsesFontLeading
                                                      attributes:@{NSFontAttributeName:self.font}
                                                         context:nil].size;
        [super drawTextInRect:CGRectMake(0, 0, ceilf(CGRectGetWidth(self.frame)),ceilf(labelStringSize.height))];
    } else {
        [super drawTextInRect:rect];
    }
}

- (void)prepareForInterfaceBuilder {
        [super prepareForInterfaceBuilder];
        self.layer.borderWidth = 1;
        self.layer.borderColor = [UIColor blackColor].CGColor;
}

@end

Since I used IBDesignable you can add this label to a storyboard and watch it go, this is what it looks like for me

enter image description here

15
  • Can u help me to solve the same case when it comes in case of TTTAttributedLabel.
    – MELWIN
    Jun 3, 2015 at 9:33
  • 1
    @MELWIN TTTAttributedLabel has a verticalAlignment property that you can set to .Top Jun 3, 2015 at 9:34
  • 1
    @DanielGalasko if the text is longer than the width of the label it turns into ellipsis rather than going next line. I have already set Lines: 0 in the XCode but it does not work. How to fix it?
    – MK Yung
    Jun 20, 2015 at 4:37
  • 1
    @daspianist solved the problem and updated the SO post as well as submitted a PR on your Github. Thanks so much for the effort! Jun 24, 2015 at 8:47
  • 2
    @DanielGalasko I found that using this code with text that was too big to fit the label's frame led to an offset appearing at the top. Fixed with CGFloat height = MIN(labelStringSize.height, CGRectGetHeight(self.frame)); [super drawTextInRect:CGRectMake(0, 0, ceilf(CGRectGetWidth(self.frame)), height)];
    – CharlesA
    Mar 17, 2016 at 12:39
48

If you're not restricted by having UILabel of fixed size, instead of aligning the text within a UILabel, simply use ≥ constraint on the given label to change the size of it.

enter image description here

It's the most elegant solution using Auto Layout. Don't forget to set numberOfLines to zero though.

3
  • 5
    Yes! Best, easiest, most elegant solution here.
    – Zack
    Nov 25, 2016 at 23:48
  • 2
    Similarly you can set height <= something
    – Dale
    Apr 2, 2017 at 0:55
  • 1
    This only works if the containing view doesn't rely on the label to determine it's width and/or height.
    – Ruiz
    Mar 2, 2018 at 13:57
33

You can use UITextView instead of UILabel:
Uncheck "Scrolling enabled"
Uncheck "Editable"
Uncheck "Selectable"
Set background color to ClearColor

4
  • 3
    this works fine for me... didn't have to override a class or anything a uitextbox did it... thanks a lot for this!
    – MsNichols
    Mar 5, 2016 at 18:48
  • 1
    Simple solution without using custom IBDesignables. Worked perfectly for me using in iOS 9.2 / Xcode 7.2.1 Mar 10, 2016 at 20:26
  • 1
    Also, in order for the text within the UITextView to align perfectly with another UILabel, I used this line of code: self.textView.textContainer.lineFragmentPadding = 0; Mar 10, 2016 at 20:45
  • Best solution so far. Works on iOS 11.2 / XCode 9.2
    – Darkwonder
    Apr 4, 2018 at 12:19
8

I had the same problem, and this is how I solved it. I just edited the Baseline under Attribute Inspector for the Label. Set it to "Align Centers".

Setting baseline to Align Centers

7

Instead, I changed the Bottom Space Constant to priority @250 and solved my problem. And my label has height constant with <= constant

3
  • Easy solution! Worked for me too May 9, 2017 at 9:07
  • I'm wondering why would this work, what's the science behind?
    – Luis Pena
    May 7, 2018 at 19:15
  • 1
    @LuisPena By default Vertical Content Hugging priority on views set in storyboard is 251, when layout engine sees bottom constraint only has 250 priority but priority to hug content is higher, it chooses to hug content. By default constraints are set to 1000, which is why it only works by setting priority lower for engine to "break" constraint, I prefer having the >= constraint as in Nikolai's answer
    – NSGangster
    Nov 6, 2019 at 22:22
4

You would do that by removing the minimum height.

If you need the minimum height to something else below the label then you would use a container view that resized based on the label contents but used a minimum.

2
  • Yes, the label height is connected to another view's top placed below the label. I understood your solution, but that makes my tablecellview more complicated, it already have a lot of constrains connecting each other. Will you please suggest me another solution like sizetofit ?
    – MELWIN
    Feb 19, 2015 at 12:02
  • Size to fit reduces the height of the label, so it's more complicated because you have specified different requirements...
    – Wain
    Feb 19, 2015 at 12:24
2

There is an easy solution for cases where the height of a label doesn't need to be constant: put your Label in a Stack View. Be sure to add leading and trailing constants to the Stack View. Here is a screenshot of how to do it in storyboard:

enter image description here

1

Auto layout only work with edges/sizes of controller, not with controllers content.so its not a good idea to use auto layout to display your label text on top of first line. according to me sizetofit is a best option to do so.

1

I used @Daniel Golasko's solution and whenever the text inside the UILabel was longer than the UILabel could contain, the text would start moving down instead of staying aligned to top.

I changed this line to make sure the text is aligned properly

    [super drawTextInRect:CGRectMake(0, 0, ceilf(CGRectGetWidth(self.frame)),MIN(ceilf(labelStringSize.height), self.frame.size.height))];
0
1

I had a similiar issue where there were 3 labels. The middle label could have much longer text than the other two, so its height could grow much larger.

Like this:

enter image description here

I set the middle label's bottom space constraint to be >= the bottom label.

enter image description here

That solved my problem.

1

Here's an improvement on the Swift 3 solution by Daniel Galasko (here you can also set the maximum line number without an offset on the top):

import UIKit

@IBDesignable class TopAlignedLabel: UILabel {
    override func drawText(in rect: CGRect) {
        if let stringText = text {
            let stringTextAsNSString = stringText as NSString
            let labelString = stringTextAsNSString.boundingRect(with: CGSize(width: frame.width, height: .greatestFiniteMagnitude),
                    options: .usesLineFragmentOrigin, attributes: [NSFontAttributeName: font], context: nil)
            super.drawText(in: CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: frame.width, height: ceil(labelString.size.height) > frame.height ? frame.height : ceil(labelString.size.height)))
        } else {
            super.drawText(in: rect)
        }
    }

    override func prepareForInterfaceBuilder() {
        super.prepareForInterfaceBuilder()
        layer.borderWidth = 1
        layer.borderColor = UIColor.black.cgColor
    }
}
1

Swift 4

You should subclass UILabel and override text display rendering.

class UITopAlignedLabel: UILabel {
    override func drawText(in rect: CGRect) {
        guard let string = text else {
            super.drawText(in: rect)
            return
        }

        let size = (string as NSString).boundingRect(
            with: CGSize(width: rect.width, height: .greatestFiniteMagnitude),
            options: [.usesLineFragmentOrigin],
            attributes: [.font: font],
            context: nil).size

        var rect = rect
        rect.size.height = size.height.rounded()
        super.drawText(in: rect)
    }
}
0

You can try if button [button setContentVerticalAlignment:UIControlContentVerticalAlignmentTop];

Edit :

You can try with this if you want to use label only:

https://stackoverflow.com/a/11278660/1223897

1
  • I didnt get the option [label setContentVerticalAlignmen...] for UILabel. It is for Button only right ?
    – MELWIN
    Feb 19, 2015 at 13:17
0

For me, I didn't set the height constraint, the text always grows from the top of the label. The constraints for this label are top, left, right. By the way, my label has fixed line numbers, so no worries about the height.

0
  @IBInspectable var alignTop: Bool = false

  func setAlignTop() {
    let text = self.text!
    let lines = text.characters.split(separator: "\n").count
    if lines < self.numberOfLines {
      var newLines = ""
      for _ in 0..<(self.numberOfLines - lines) {
        newLines = newLines.appending("\n ")
      }
      self.text! = text.appending(newLines)
    }
  }

  override var text: String? {
    didSet {
      if alignTop {
        self.setAlignTop()
      }
    }
  }
0

use this my class, you can change text alignment by contentMode.

supported case: .top, .bottom, .left, .right, .topLeft, .topRight, .bottomLeft, .bottomRight

Swift4

import Foundation
import UIKit

@IBDesignable
class UIAlignedLabel: UILabel {

    override func drawText(in rect: CGRect) {
        if let text = text as NSString? {
            func defaultRect(for maxSize: CGSize) -> CGRect {
                let size = text
                    .boundingRect(
                        with: maxSize,
                        options: NSStringDrawingOptions.usesLineFragmentOrigin,
                        attributes: [
                            NSAttributedStringKey.font: font
                        ],
                        context: nil
                    ).size
                let rect = CGRect(
                    origin: .zero,
                    size: CGSize(
                        width: min(frame.width, ceil(size.width)),
                        height: min(frame.height, ceil(size.height))
                    )
                )
                return rect

            }
            switch contentMode {
            case .top, .bottom, .left, .right, .topLeft, .topRight, .bottomLeft, .bottomRight:
                let maxSize = CGSize(width: frame.width, height: frame.height)
                var rect = defaultRect(for: maxSize)
                switch contentMode {
                    case .bottom, .bottomLeft, .bottomRight:
                        rect.origin.y = frame.height - rect.height
                    default: break
                }
                switch contentMode {
                    case .right, .topRight, .bottomRight:
                        rect.origin.x = frame.width - rect.width
                    default: break
                }
                super.drawText(in: rect)
            default:
                super.drawText(in: rect)
            }
        } else {
            super.drawText(in: rect)
        }
    }

}
0

In the Interface Builder, just make the height <= some value instead of =. This will enable to text to start at the top and expand the height as needed. For example, I have a label with a height proportional to the size of the main view. So my height constraint looks like this: Height Constraint

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