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I'm wondering about changing the color of the cursor / caret in a UITextField (And UITextView if its the same answer) in iOS. I've seen answers for OSX development, but nothing for iOS.

Is this even possible?

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16 Answers 16

573

If you're targeting iOS 7+, this has been made much easier. Simply change the tintColor of the field with a cursor using the appearance proxy and it will apply throughout the app:

Swift 3.0:

UITextField.appearance().tintColor = .black 

Objective-C:

[[UITextField appearance] setTintColor:[UIColor blackColor]];

Same answer applies for an individual UITextField:

Swift 3.0:

myTextField.tintColor = .black 

Objective-C

[myTextField setTintColor:[UIColor blackColor]];
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  • 13
    I found this caused my UIBarButton item tint colors to become fixed to their default values even if I set the tint color to something entirely different. I solved the problem by setting the tint color of the UITextFields individually when they are created. Jan 9, 2014 at 5:48
  • This works, but only if you do it in didFinishLaunching? Or can you do it based on user interaction, e.g. press a button? Apr 9, 2014 at 7:08
  • @SteffenAndersen it should behave according to the UIAppearance proxy API documentation.
    – DiscDev
    Apr 29, 2014 at 15:36
  • [[UITextView appearance] setTintColor:teal]; for some reason this changes the color of my navbarbuttons, how did you set indidividually?
    – John
    Apr 7, 2015 at 0:28
  • 3
    On Swift 3.0 use this: UITextField.appearance().tintColor = UIColor.black Oct 6, 2016 at 1:16
45

With iOS7 you can simply change tintColor of the textField

23

Swift 3:

  UITextField.appearance().tintColor = UIColor.black
  UITextView.appearance().tintColor = UIColor.black
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  • 1
    On Swift 3.0 use this: UITextField.appearance().tintColor = UIColor.black Oct 6, 2016 at 1:16
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yourTextField.tintColor = [UIColor whiteColor];

It works if you set it in code, 'cos somehow color trigger doesn't do it in the Interface Builder (Xcode 6.1.1). It suited well without a need to change any appearance proxy.

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    For some unknown reason it does not work for me with whiteColor but does work with every other color (testing on iOS 8). I had to set color that is almost white but not white to make it work. Feb 15, 2017 at 18:15
  • @LeszekSzary Hey! You saved my day! I was trying nearly 4 hours and your words were the clue! Apple should fix this crazy bug which indeed drives the developer crazy. Jul 24, 2019 at 8:05
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Note: This answer is out of date and should be used for pre-iOS 7 development only. See other answers for a 1 line solution using the appearance proxy in iOS 7.

I arrived at this question after I faced the same problem in a project I was working on.

I managed to create a solution that will be accepted by the AppStore review team as it does not use any existing Private APIs.

I have created a control called DGTextField that extends UITextField.

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  • This is great. Honestly, because of this, I'll definitely be keeping a closer eye on "Conforms to" in the docs. However, I'm glad only one person had to spend the time reading and tinkering on this. Hopefully other people will be able to see and use this!
    – RileyE
    Jan 21, 2013 at 21:11
  • However, I might recommend animation options, removing the @propery and just creating setters and getters as well as a setter and getter for the custom caret width. You may not be interested, but I always love the little tweaks!
    – RileyE
    Jan 21, 2013 at 21:14
  • @RileyE I am glad you were able to benefit from my solution. Feel free to fork the repo and add any tweaks you would like to share.
    – Dov
    Jan 23, 2013 at 7:34
  • 3
    It's much easier in iOS 7 - see my answer below: stackoverflow.com/a/18945907/1103584
    – DiscDev
    Sep 24, 2013 at 2:54
13

Setting tintColor for UITextField and UITextView works differently. While for UITextField you don't need to call additional code after updating tintColor to change cursor color, but for UITextView you need.

So after setting tintColor for UITextView (it doesn't matter in IB or in code) you need to call textView.tintColorDidChange() in order to apply it (actually it will pass text view's config down to its subviews hierarchy).

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This worked for me in swift:

UITextField.tintColor = UIColor.blackColor()

You can also set this in storyboard: https://stackoverflow.com/a/18759577/3075340

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  • This doesn't work. I got the error: Instance member 'tintcolor' cannot be used on type 'UITextField'
    – pableiros
    Nov 2, 2016 at 16:55
  • @pableiros The above was with Swift 2. Maybe you are using Swift 3 now?
    – Micro
    Nov 2, 2016 at 17:43
  • I tried on Swift 3 and Swift 2.3, I'm not sure if on Swift 2.2 and lower it works
    – pableiros
    Nov 2, 2016 at 17:47
  • pableiros' issue is that the answer should have someTextFieldInstance instead of UITextField, because tintColor is an instance member
    – Marmoy
    Jul 21, 2020 at 11:48
3

A more general approach would be to set the UIView's appearance's tintColor.

UIColor *myColor = [UIColor purpleColor];
[[UIView appearance] setTintColor:myColor];

Makes sense if you're using many default UI elements.

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    Hmmm...this has many other side-effects...the question is only asking about changing the caret color, and your answer is going to tint every single UIView in the app...this is probably not the approach most people want to take.
    – DiscDev
    Oct 4, 2013 at 15:26
  • +1 on that, too many side effects, if the goal is just to change the caret color. Setting UIView tintColor IS useful when you're styling a container (but then I wouldn't use [UIView appearance]
    – colinta
    Jan 18, 2014 at 1:02
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Try, Its working for me.

[[self.textField valueForKey:@"textInputTraits"] setValue:[UIColor redColor] strong textforKey:@"insertionPointColor"];
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    That's using a private method, but thank you for the suggestion. This can easily get an application rejected.
    – RileyE
    Jun 7, 2013 at 15:51
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It is only possible by accessing a private property and therefore may cause an Apple AppStore app rejection.

take a look at this Stackoverflow question

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1

I think If you want some custom colors you can go to Assets.xcassets folder, right click and select New Color Set, once you created you color you set, give it a name to reuse it.

And you can use it just like this :

import UIKit 

class ViewController: UIViewController {
    override func viewDidLoad() {
        super.viewDidLoad()
        UITextField.appearance().tintColor = UIColor(named: "YOUR-COLOR-NAME")  #here
    }
}

Tested on macOS 10.15 / iOS 13 / Swift 5

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Durgesh's approach does work.

I also used such KVC solutions many times. Despite it seems to be undocumented, but it works. Frankly, you don't use any private methods here - only Key-Value Coding which is legal.

P.S. Yesterday my new app appeared at AppStore without any problems with this approach. And it is not the first case when I use KVC in changing some read-only properties (like navigatonBar) or private ivars.

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    It's not using a private method, but rather that the keys are undocumented, which means they aren't to be used for applications on the App Store. Your application may get rejected subjectively. You must have had a kind reviewer, as many have been rejected for using that method.
    – RileyE
    Sep 16, 2013 at 18:48
  • Then I have about 10 kind reviewers :) and my numerous colleagues too.
    – malex
    Sep 16, 2013 at 19:02
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    Just to clarify, the "Key-Value Coding" in this case is assigning a value to a property using the convenience method. The reason that we're using that, versus a setter, is because the property is inaccessible/hidden/private.
    – RileyE
    Sep 16, 2013 at 19:09
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    Here I mean (maybe I don't know something important) only that documentation on KVC doesn't imply any restrictions literally. So I successfully use all of these. And hopefully can others.
    – malex
    Sep 16, 2013 at 19:14
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    Appreciated. However, Apple, in their 'Terms of Use Agreement' states that we are allowed to use and openly discuss anything included in their documentation and prohibits the use of undocumented methods (Accessing the 'textInputTraits' setter method through KVC would be included, as the property is undocumented). Essentially, if you can't find the method in the documentation, it's prohibited. Prohibited doesn't guarantee rejection, though. I've had some applications get rejected for reasons included in some of my apps that make it to the store. It's hit and miss with undocumented methods.
    – RileyE
    Sep 16, 2013 at 19:21
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For Interface Builder version with Swift

@IBOutlet weak var tvValue: UITextView! {
        didSet {
            tvValue.tintColor = .black
        }
    }
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If the UITextField is from UISearchBar then first get the textField from searchBar and then apply tintColor property:

let textFieldInsideSearchBar = searchBar.value(forKey: "searchField") as? UITextField
textFieldInsideSearchBar?.tintColor = UIColor.lightGray
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Swift 4

In viewDidLoad() just call below code:

CODE SAMPLE

//txtVComplaint is a textView

txtVComplaint.tintColor = UIColor.white

txtVComplaint.tintColorDidChange()
0

For people searching the equivalent in SwiftUI for Textfield this is accentColor:

TextField("Label", text: $self.textToBind).accentColor(Color.red)
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    He asked about UITextField (UIKit), not SwiftUI.
    – nodebase
    Dec 12, 2022 at 14:47

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