What's the easiest way to save a UIColor
into NSUserDefaults
and then get it back out?
8 Answers
One way of doing it might be to archive it (like with NSColor, though I haven't tested this):
NSData *colorData = [NSKeyedArchiver archivedDataWithRootObject:color];
[[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] setObject:colorData forKey:@"myColor"];
And to get it back:
NSData *colorData = [[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] objectForKey:@"myColor"];
UIColor *color = [NSKeyedUnarchiver unarchiveObjectWithData:colorData];
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3
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This method serializes a color to 315 bytes of data .. seems like a bit of a waste. Erica Sadun's UIColor category referenced by lifjoy's answer seems like a better solution.– stevexAug 15, 2012 at 11:51
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3This way also saves the color profile associated with the color. If that's not important to you, sure.– WevahAug 15, 2012 at 13:17
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@Wevah This doesn't seem to work with CCColor, do you have any ideas for that?– JasonApr 17, 2014 at 0:37
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2In Swift:
var colorData:NSData = NSKeyedArchiver.archivedDataWithRootObject(color); defaults.setObject(colorData, forKey: "BackgroundColor");
– FredLOct 17, 2014 at 9:27
With the accepted answer, you'll quickly end up with a lot of NSKeyed archives & unarchives all over your code. A cleaner solution is to extend UserDefaults. This is exactly what extensions are for; UserDefaults probably doesn't know about UIColor as it is because UIKit and Foundation are different frameworks.
Swift
extension UserDefaults {
func color(forKey key: String) -> UIColor? {
var color: UIColor?
if let colorData = data(forKey: key) {
color = NSKeyedUnarchiver.unarchiveObject(with: colorData) as? UIColor
}
return color
}
func set(_ value: UIColor?, forKey key: String) {
var colorData: Data?
if let color = value {
colorData = NSKeyedArchiver.archivedData(withRootObject: color)
}
set(colorData, forKey: key)
}
}
Swift 4.2
extension UserDefaults {
func color(forKey key: String) -> UIColor? {
guard let colorData = data(forKey: key) else { return nil }
do {
return try NSKeyedUnarchiver.unarchivedObject(ofClass: UIColor.self, from: colorData)
} catch let error {
print("color error \(error.localizedDescription)")
return nil
}
}
func set(_ value: UIColor?, forKey key: String) {
guard let color = value else { return }
do {
let data = try NSKeyedArchiver.archivedData(withRootObject: color, requiringSecureCoding: false)
set(data, forKey: key)
} catch let error {
print("error color key data not saved \(error.localizedDescription)")
}
}
}
Usage
UserDefaults.standard.set(UIColor.white, forKey: "white")
let whiteColor = UserDefaults.standard.color(forKey: "white")
This can also be done in Objective-C with a category.
I've added the Swift file as a gist here.
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2
I've got the answer by myself
Save
const CGFloat *components = CGColorGetComponents(pColor.CGColor);
NSUserDefaults *prefs = [NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults];
[prefs setFloat:components[0] forKey:@"cr"];
[prefs setFloat:components[1] forKey:@"cg"];
[prefs setFloat:components[2] forKey:@"cb"];
[prefs setFloat:components[3] forKey:@"ca"];
Load
NSUserDefaults *prefs = [NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults];
UIColor* tColor = [UIColor colorWithRed:[prefs floatForKey:@"cr"] green:[prefs floatForKey:@"cg"] blue:[prefs floatForKey:@"cb"] alpha:[prefs floatForKey:@"ca"]];
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5The only issue that could arise is if the underlying CGColor isn't in the RGB colorspace. If you're certain it will be RGB, this is probably a nicer option than archival.– WevahAug 14, 2009 at 3:02
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Aside from the RGB assumption, this solution will get annoying once you have two or more colors to preserve. Ideally, you want to store all the color information under a single key, not four, then write a generic get/set function.– benzadoMay 2, 2011 at 19:27
Thanks for Erica's UIColor category. I did not really like saving 4 floats in the preferences, and just wanted a single entry.
So using Erica's UIColor
category, I was able to convert the RGB color to/from an NSString
which can be saved in the preferences.
// Save a color
NSString *theColorStr = [self.artistColor stringFromColor];
[[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] setObject:theColorStr forKey:@"myColor"];
// Read a color
NSString *theColorStr = [[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] objectForKey:@"myColor"];
if ([theColorStr length] > 0) {
self.myColor = [UIColor colorWithString:theColorStr];
} else {
self.myColor = [UIColor colorWithRed:88.0/255.0 green:151.0/255.0 blue:237.0/255.0 alpha:1.0];
}
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6Look into
[NSUserDefaults registerDefaults:]
to set a default value (so you can avoid the if/else when you read the value).– benzadoMay 2, 2011 at 19:29 -
UIColor-Expanded.m and UIColor-Expanded.h files can be found here : github.com/ars/uicolor-utilities Feb 19, 2013 at 14:18
Swift 3, UserDefaults
Extension
extension UserDefaults {
internal func color(forKey key: String) -> UIColor? {
guard let colorData = data(forKey: key) else {
return nil
}
return NSKeyedUnarchiver.unarchiveObject(with: colorData) as? UIColor
}
internal func setColor(_ color: UIColor?, forKey key: String) {
let colorData: Data?
if let color = color {
colorData = NSKeyedArchiver.archivedData(withRootObject: color)
}
else {
colorData = nil
}
set(colorData, forKey: key)
}
}
Example Use
let colorKey = "favoriteColor"
UserDefaults.standard.setColor(UIColor.red, forKey: colorKey)
let favoriteColor = UserDefaults.standard.color(forKey: colorKey)
print("favoriteColor is red: '\(favoriteColor == UIColor.red)'")
This answer is based on a previous answer. It is updated for Swift 3.
I needed to store array of UIColor
objects in User Defaults. Idea, as stated in other answers, is to convert UIColor
to Data and save that data. I've made extension on UIColor
:
extension UIColor {
func data() -> Data {
return NSKeyedArchiver.archivedData(withRootObject: self)
}
class func color(withData data: Data) -> UIColor? {
return NSKeyedUnarchiver.unarchiveObject(with: data) as? UIColor
}
}
Usage:
fileprivate var savedColors: [UIColor]? {
get {
if let colorDataArray = UserDefaults.standard.array(forKey: Constants.savedColorsKey) as? [Data] {
return colorDataArray.map { UIColor.color(withData: $0)! }
}
return nil
}
set {
if let colorDataArray = newValue?.map({ $0.data() }) {
UserDefaults.standard.set(colorDataArray, forKey: Constants.savedColorsKey)
}
}
}
Swift
private let colorPickerKey = "ColorPickerKey"
var selectedColor: UIColor? {
get {
guard let colorData = UserDefaults.standard.object(forKey: colorPickerKey) as? Data,
let color = NSKeyedUnarchiver.unarchiveObject(with: colorData) as? UIColor else { return nil }
return color
} set {
guard let newValue = newValue else {
UserDefaults.standard.removeObject(forKey: colorPickerKey)
return
}
let colorData = NSKeyedArchiver.archivedData(withRootObject: newValue)
UserDefaults.standard.set(colorData, forKey: colorPickerKey)
}
}
Edit 2: I seem to have found the answer. Check out the article by Erica Sadun on extending UIColor.
Edit: This code does not seem to work for a UIColor Object. Not sure why...
Here is some code to take a look at:
Saving an object into NSUserDefaults:
NSUserDefaults *userDefaults =[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults];
[userDefaults setObject:someColorObject forKey:@"myColor"];
Reading an object from NSUserDefaults:
NSUserDefaults *userDefaults =[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults];
UIColor *someColor = (UIColor *)[userDefaults objectForKey:@"myColor"];
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I appreicate for your help, but it seems that NSUserDefaults can't save UIColor object Aug 14, 2009 at 2:15
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This doesn't work because NSUserDefaults can only store Property List Objects: NSString, NSNumber, NSDate, NSData, NSArray, and NSDictionary (where all keys must be strings). Anything else must be encoded as one of those objects.– benzadoMay 2, 2011 at 19:21