I am trying to use hex color values in Swift, instead of the few standard ones that UIColor
allows you to use, but I have no idea how to do it.
Example: how would I use #ffffff
as a color?
Swift 2.0:
Make an extension of UIColor.
extension UIColor {
convenience init(hexString:String) {
let hexString:NSString = hexString.stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet(NSCharacterSet.whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet())
let scanner = NSScanner(string: hexString as String)
if (hexString.hasPrefix("#")) {
scanner.scanLocation = 1
}
var color:UInt32 = 0
scanner.scanHexInt(&color)
let mask = 0x000000FF
let r = Int(color >> 16) & mask
let g = Int(color >> 8) & mask
let b = Int(color) & mask
let red = CGFloat(r) / 255.0
let green = CGFloat(g) / 255.0
let blue = CGFloat(b) / 255.0
self.init(red:red, green:green, blue:blue, alpha:1)
}
func toHexString() -> String {
var r:CGFloat = 0
var g:CGFloat = 0
var b:CGFloat = 0
var a:CGFloat = 0
getRed(&r, green: &g, blue: &b, alpha: &a)
let rgb:Int = (Int)(r*255)<<16 | (Int)(g*255)<<8 | (Int)(b*255)<<0
return NSString(format:"#%06x", rgb) as String
}
}
Usage:
//Hex to Color
let countPartColor = UIColor(hexString: "E43038")
//Color to Hex
let colorHexString = UIColor(red: 228, green: 48, blue: 56, alpha: 1.0).toHexString()
For swift 3
extension String {
var hexColor: UIColor {
let hex = trimmingCharacters(in: CharacterSet.alphanumerics.inverted)
var int = UInt32()
Scanner(string: hex).scanHexInt32(&int)
let a, r, g, b: UInt32
switch hex.characters.count {
case 3: // RGB (12-bit)
(a, r, g, b) = (255, (int >> 8) * 17, (int >> 4 & 0xF) * 17, (int & 0xF) * 17)
case 6: // RGB (24-bit)
(a, r, g, b) = (255, int >> 16, int >> 8 & 0xFF, int & 0xFF)
case 8: // ARGB (32-bit)
(a, r, g, b) = (int >> 24, int >> 16 & 0xFF, int >> 8 & 0xFF, int & 0xFF)
default:
return .clear
}
return UIColor(red: CGFloat(r) / 255, green: CGFloat(g) / 255, blue: CGFloat(b) / 255, alpha: CGFloat(a) / 255)
}
}
You can use this extension on UIColor which converts Your String (Hexadecimal , RGBA) to UIColor and vice versa.
extension UIColor {
//Convert RGBA String to UIColor object
//"rgbaString" must be separated by space "0.5 0.6 0.7 1.0" 50% of Red 60% of Green 70% of Blue Alpha 100%
public convenience init?(rgbaString : String){
self.init(ciColor: CIColor(string: rgbaString))
}
//Convert UIColor to RGBA String
func toRGBAString()-> String {
var r: CGFloat = 0
var g: CGFloat = 0
var b: CGFloat = 0
var a: CGFloat = 0
self.getRed(&r, green: &g, blue: &b, alpha: &a)
return "\(r) \(g) \(b) \(a)"
}
//return UIColor from Hexadecimal Color string
public convenience init?(hexString: String) {
let r, g, b, a: CGFloat
if hexString.hasPrefix("#") {
let start = hexString.index(hexString.startIndex, offsetBy: 1)
let hexColor = hexString.substring(from: start)
if hexColor.characters.count == 8 {
let scanner = Scanner(string: hexColor)
var hexNumber: UInt64 = 0
if scanner.scanHexInt64(&hexNumber) {
r = CGFloat((hexNumber & 0xff000000) >> 24) / 255
g = CGFloat((hexNumber & 0x00ff0000) >> 16) / 255
b = CGFloat((hexNumber & 0x0000ff00) >> 8) / 255
a = CGFloat(hexNumber & 0x000000ff) / 255
self.init(red: r, green: g, blue: b, alpha: a)
return
}
}
}
return nil
}
// Convert UIColor to Hexadecimal String
func toHexString() -> String {
var r: CGFloat = 0
var g: CGFloat = 0
var b: CGFloat = 0
var a: CGFloat = 0
self.getRed(&r, green: &g, blue: &b, alpha: &a)
return String(
format: "%02X%02X%02X",
Int(r * 0xff),
Int(g * 0xff),
Int(b * 0xff))
}
}
UIColor extension, This will greatly help you! (version:Swift 4.0)
import UIKit
extension UIColor {
/// rgb颜色
convenience init(r: CGFloat, g: CGFloat, b: CGFloat) {
self.init(red: r/255.0 ,green: g/255.0 ,blue: b/255.0 ,alpha:1.0)
}
/// 纯色(用于灰色)
convenience init(gray: CGFloat) {
self.init(red: gray/255.0 ,green: gray/255.0 ,blue: gray/255.0 ,alpha:1.0)
}
/// 随机色
class func randomCGColor() -> UIColor {
return UIColor(r: CGFloat(arc4random_uniform(256)), g: CGFloat(arc4random_uniform(256)), b: CGFloat(arc4random_uniform(256)))
}
/// hex颜色-Int
convenience init(hex:Int, alpha:CGFloat = 1.0) {
self.init(
red: CGFloat((hex & 0xFF0000) >> 16) / 255.0,
green: CGFloat((hex & 0x00FF00) >> 8) / 255.0,
blue: CGFloat((hex & 0x0000FF) >> 0) / 255.0,
alpha: alpha
)
}
/// hex颜色-String
convenience init(hexString: String){
var red: CGFloat = 0.0
var green: CGFloat = 0.0
var blue: CGFloat = 0.0
var alpha: CGFloat = 1.0
let scanner = Scanner(string: hexString)
var hexValue: CUnsignedLongLong = 0
if scanner.scanHexInt64(&hexValue) {
switch (hexString.characters.count) {
case 3:
red = CGFloat((hexValue & 0xF00) >> 8) / 15.0
green = CGFloat((hexValue & 0x0F0) >> 4) / 15.0
blue = CGFloat(hexValue & 0x00F) / 15.0
case 4:
red = CGFloat((hexValue & 0xF000) >> 12) / 15.0
green = CGFloat((hexValue & 0x0F00) >> 8) / 15.0
blue = CGFloat((hexValue & 0x00F0) >> 4) / 15.0
alpha = CGFloat(hexValue & 0x000F) / 15.0
case 6:
red = CGFloat((hexValue & 0xFF0000) >> 16) / 255.0
green = CGFloat((hexValue & 0x00FF00) >> 8) / 255.0
blue = CGFloat(hexValue & 0x0000FF) / 255.0
case 8:
alpha = CGFloat((hexValue & 0xFF000000) >> 24) / 255.0
red = CGFloat((hexValue & 0x00FF0000) >> 16) / 255.0
green = CGFloat((hexValue & 0x0000FF00) >> 8) / 255.0
blue = CGFloat(hexValue & 0x000000FF) / 255.0
default:
log.info("Invalid RGB string, number of characters after '#' should be either 3, 4, 6 or 8")
}
} else {
log.error("Scan hex error")
}
self.init(red:red, green:green, blue:blue, alpha:alpha)
}}
I like @Luca's answer as i think it's the most elegant.
However I don't want my colours specified in ARGB. I'd rather RGBA + also i needed to hack in the case of dealing with strings that specify 1 character for each of the channels "#FFFA".
This version also adds error throwing + strips the '#' character if it's included in the string. Here is my modified form for Swift.
public enum ColourParsingError: Error
{
case invalidInput(String)
}
extension UIColor {
public convenience init(hexString: String) throws
{
let hexString = hexString.replacingOccurrences(of: "#", with: "")
let hex = hexString.trimmingCharacters(in:NSCharacterSet.alphanumerics.inverted)
var int = UInt32()
Scanner(string: hex).scanHexInt32(&int)
let a, r, g, b: UInt32
switch hex.count
{
case 3: // RGB (12-bit)
(r, g, b,a) = ((int >> 8) * 17, (int >> 4 & 0xF) * 17, (int & 0xF) * 17,255)
//iCSS specification in the form of #F0FA
case 4: // RGB (24-bit)
(r, g, b,a) = ((int >> 12) * 17, (int >> 8 & 0xF) * 17, (int >> 4 & 0xF) * 17, (int & 0xF) * 17)
case 6: // RGB (24-bit)
(r, g, b, a) = (int >> 16, int >> 8 & 0xFF, int & 0xFF,255)
case 8: // ARGB (32-bit)
(r, g, b, a) = (int >> 24, int >> 16 & 0xFF, int >> 8 & 0xFF, int & 0xFF)
default:
throw ColourParsingError.invalidInput("String is not a valid hex colour string: \(hexString)")
}
self.init(red: CGFloat(r) / 255, green: CGFloat(g) / 255, blue: CGFloat(b) / 255, alpha: CGFloat(a) / 255)
}
}
Try this
UIColor(hexString: "#ffffff")
.
extension UIColor {
convenience init?(hexString hex: String) {
var cString: String = hex.trimmingCharacters(in: .whitespacesAndNewlines).uppercased()
if cString.hasPrefix("#") {
cString.remove(at: cString.startIndex)
}
guard cString.count == 6 else {
return nil
}
var rgbValue: UInt64 = 0
Scanner(string: cString).scanHexInt64(&rgbValue)
self.init(
red: CGFloat((rgbValue & 0xFF0000) >> 16) / 255.0,
green: CGFloat((rgbValue & 0x00FF00) >> 8) / 255.0,
blue: CGFloat(rgbValue & 0x0000FF) / 255.0,
alpha: CGFloat(1.0)
)
}
}
Just some addiotion to the first answer
(haven't cehcked the alpha, may need to add an if netHext > 0xffffff
):
extension UIColor {
struct COLORS_HEX {
static let Primary = 0xffffff
static let PrimaryDark = 0x000000
static let Accent = 0xe89549
static let AccentDark = 0xe27b2a
static let TextWhiteSemiTransparent = 0x80ffffff
}
convenience init(red: Int, green: Int, blue: Int, alphaH: Int) {
assert(red >= 0 && red <= 255, "Invalid red component")
assert(green >= 0 && green <= 255, "Invalid green component")
assert(blue >= 0 && blue <= 255, "Invalid blue component")
assert(alphaH >= 0 && alphaH <= 255, "Invalid alpha component")
self.init(red: CGFloat(red) / 255.0, green: CGFloat(green) / 255.0, blue: CGFloat(blue) / 255.0, alpha: CGFloat(alphaH) / 255.0)
}
convenience init(netHex:Int) {
self.init(red:(netHex >> 16) & 0xff, green:(netHex >> 8) & 0xff, blue:netHex & 0xff, alphaH: (netHex >> 24) & 0xff)
}
}
Swift 2.3: UIColor Extension. I Think its simpler.
extension UIColor {
static func colorFromHex(hexString: String, alpha: CGFloat = 1) -> UIColor {
//checking if hex has 7 characters or not including '#'
if hexString.characters.count < 7 {
return UIColor.whiteColor()
}
//string by removing hash
let hexStringWithoutHash = hexString.substringFromIndex(hexString.startIndex.advancedBy(1))
//I am extracting three parts of hex color Red (first 2 characters), Green (middle 2 characters), Blue (last two characters)
let eachColor = [
hexStringWithoutHash.substringWithRange(hexStringWithoutHash.startIndex...hexStringWithoutHash.startIndex.advancedBy(1)),
hexStringWithoutHash.substringWithRange(hexStringWithoutHash.startIndex.advancedBy(2)...hexStringWithoutHash.startIndex.advancedBy(3)),
hexStringWithoutHash.substringWithRange(hexStringWithoutHash.startIndex.advancedBy(4)...hexStringWithoutHash.startIndex.advancedBy(5))]
let hexForEach = eachColor.map {CGFloat(Int($0, radix: 16) ?? 0)} //radix is base of numeric system you want to convert to, Hexadecimal has base 16
//return the color by making color
return UIColor(red: hexForEach[0] / 255, green: hexForEach[1] / 255, blue: hexForEach[2] / 255, alpha: alpha)
}
}
Usage:
let color = UIColor.colorFromHex("#25ac09")
I made a small function,placed it from where I can use it globally & working fine with swift 2.1:
func getColorFromHex(rgbValue:UInt32)->UIColor{
let red = CGFloat((rgbValue & 0xFF0000) >> 16)/255.0
let green = CGFloat((rgbValue & 0xFF00) >> 8)/255.0
let blue = CGFloat(rgbValue & 0xFF)/255.0
return UIColor(red:red, green:green, blue:blue, alpha:1.0)
}
usage:
getColorFromHex(0xffffff)
255
not 256
. There is no way to get white using your code. Only "almost white".
Swift 4.0
use this Single line of method
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
let color = UIColor(hexColor: "FF00A0")
self.view.backgroundColor = color
}
You have to create new Class or use any controller where u need to use Hex color. This extension class provide you UIColor that will convert Hex to RGB color.
extension UIColor {
convenience init(hexColor: String) {
let scannHex = Scanner(string: hexColor)
var rgbValue: UInt64 = 0
scannHex.scanLocation = 0
scannHex.scanHexInt64(&rgbValue)
let r = (rgbValue & 0xff0000) >> 16
let g = (rgbValue & 0xff00) >> 8
let b = rgbValue & 0xff
self.init(
red: CGFloat(r) / 0xff,
green: CGFloat(g) / 0xff,
blue: CGFloat(b) / 0xff, alpha: 1
)
}
}
extension UIColor {
convenience init(hex: Int, alpha: Double = 1.0) {
self.init(red: CGFloat((hex>>16)&0xFF)/255.0, green:CGFloat((hex>>8)&0xFF)/255.0, blue: CGFloat((hex)&0xFF)/255.0, alpha: CGFloat(255 * alpha) / 255)
}
}
Use this extension like:
let selectedColor = UIColor(hex: 0xFFFFFF)
let selectedColor = UIColor(hex: 0xFFFFFF, alpha: 0.5)
extension UIColor {
convenience init(r: CGFloat, g: CGFloat, b: CGFloat, a: CGFloat = 1) {
self.init(red: r/255, green: g/255, blue: b/255, alpha: a)
}
convenience init(hex: Int, alpha: CGFloat = 1) {
self.init(r: CGFloat((hex >> 16) & 0xff), g: CGFloat((hex >> 08) & 0xff), b: CGFloat((hex >> 00) & 0xff), a: alpha)
}
}
#ffffff
are actually 3 color components in hexadecimal notation - redff
, greenff
and blueff
. You can write hexadecimal notation in Swift using0x
prefix, e.g0xFF
.