I know that currently the status bar (with the time, battery, and network connection) at the top of the iPhone/iPad is 20 pixels for non-retina screens and 40 pixels for retina screens, but to future proof my app I would like to be able to determine this without hard coding values. Is it possible to figure out the height of the status bar programmatically?
15 Answers
[UIApplication sharedApplication].statusBarFrame.size.height
. But since all sizes are in points, not in pixels, status bar height always equals 20.
Update. Seeing this answer being considered helpful, I should elaborate.
Status bar height is, indeed, equals 20.0f points except following cases:
- status bar has been hidden with
setStatusBarHidden:withAnimation:
method and its height equals 0.0f points; - as @Anton here pointed out, during an incoming call outside of Phone application or during sound recording session status bar height equals 40.0f points.
There's also a case of status bar affecting the height of your view. Normally, the view's height equals screen dimension for given orientation minus status bar height. However, if you animate status bar (show or hide it) after the view was shown, status bar will change its frame, but the view will not, you'll have to manually resize the view after status bar animation (or during animation since status bar height sets to final value at the start of animation).
Update 2. There's also a case of user interface orientation. Status bar does not respect the orientation value, thus status bar height value for portrait mode is [UIApplication sharedApplication].statusBarFrame.size.height
(yes, default orientation is always portrait, no matter what your app info.plist says), for landscape - [UIApplication sharedApplication].statusBarFrame.size.width
. To determine UI's current orientation when outside of UIViewController
and self.interfaceOrientation
is not available, use [UIApplication sharedApplication].statusBarOrientation
.
Update for iOS7. Even though status bar visual style changed, it's still there, its frame still behaves the same. The only interesting find about status bar I got – I share: your UINavigationBar
's tiled background will also be tiled to status bar, so you can achieve some interesting design effects or just color your status bar. This, too, won't affect status bar height in any way.
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6
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1@MarcMosby, see my update. Remembered this issue - thanks to you. Aug 28, 2013 at 11:26
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2Yes, as Marc pointed on iOS7 it yeilds 1024 sometimes and 20 sometimes. So this is no longer a fool proof way of determining the height. I doubt this is because of the transparent nature of the status bar on iOS 7. It could be that, it first goes to full screen and then resizes itself. So if you app queries during this transition, you might get the wrong value. May be calling this method with a delay might help on iOS 7. Sep 19, 2013 at 11:59
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1There is a case where status bar height can be zero. If supportedInterfaceOrientations() return UIInterfaceOrientation (incorrect result but no compiler error) instead of UIInterfaceOrientationMask and a viewcontroller is presented and dismissed, status bar height will become zero.– CymricJul 4, 2015 at 6:49
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5
Go with Martin's suggestion to the question: Get iPhone Status Bar Height.
CGFloat AACStatusBarHeight()
{
CGSize statusBarSize = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] statusBarFrame].size;
return MIN(statusBarSize.width, statusBarSize.height);
}
And in Swift
func statusBarHeight() -> CGFloat {
let statusBarSize = UIApplication.shared.statusBarFrame.size
return Swift.min(statusBarSize.width, statusBarSize.height)
}
It seems like a hack, but it's actually pretty solid. Anyway, it's the only working solution.
Old Answer
The following code, which would go in your custom subclass of UIViewController
, almost worked to support landscape. But, I noticed a corner case (when rotating from right > unsupported upside-down > left) for which it didn't work (switched height & width).
BOOL isPortrait = self.interfaceOrientation == UIInterfaceOrientationPortrait;
CGSize statusBarSize = [UIApplication sharedApplication].statusBarFrame.size;
CGFloat statusBarHeight = (isPortrait ? statusBarSize.height : statusBarSize.width);
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This is not correct. The height of the status bar does not changes when you rotate the device. The width would, but the code above does not show that, nor was that the original question.– lehn0058May 17, 2013 at 1:16
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1You're right that "the height of the status bar does not changes when you rotate the device." But, as Ash answered, "in landscape mode, you may find that width and height are swapped." The code above takes that into account. May 17, 2013 at 11:43
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This is an interesting issue I have been seeing now as well. It looks like a bug to me on Apple's side, but still needs to be accounted for.– lehn0058Jan 2, 2014 at 15:54
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2@lehn0058 It's not a bug, it's how Apple handles the bar internally. It is attached to a window and that window is rotated using a transform. The
statusBarFrame
is returned as the value before the transform. Mar 8, 2014 at 15:53 -
1
Try this:
CGFloat statusBarHeight = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] statusBarFrame].size.height;
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1the height returned in different orientations is different. that's strange Dec 10, 2013 at 12:20
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1Yes, if rotation is landscape - [[UIApplication sharedApplication] statusBarFrame].size.height and [[UIApplication sharedApplication] statusBarFrame].size.width values are switched. May 10, 2014 at 18:35
While the status bar is usually 20pt tall, it can be twice that amount in some situations:
- when you're in the middle of a phone call (that's a pretty common scenario);
- when the voice recorder, or Skype, or a similar app, is using the microphone in the background;
- when Personal Hotspot is activated;
Just try it, and you'll see for yourself. Hardcoding the height to 20pt will usually work, until it doesn't.
So I second H2CO3's answer:
statusBarHeight = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] statusBarFrame].size.height;
EDIT
The iOS 11 way to work out where to put the top of your view content is UIView's safeAreaLayoutGuide
See UIView Documentation.
DEPRECATED ANSWER
If you're targeting iOS 7+, The documentation for UIViewController advises that the viewController's topLayoutGuide
property gives you the bottom of the status bar, or the bottom of the navigation bar, if it's also visible. That may be of use, and is certainly less hack than many of the previous solutions.
For iOS 13 you can use:
UIApplication.shared.keyWindow?.windowScene?.statusBarManager?.statusBarFrame.height
Don't forget that the status bar's frame will be in the screen's coordinate space! If you launch in landscape mode, you may find that width and height are swapped. I strongly recommend that you use this version of the code instead if you support landscape orientations:
CGRect statusBarFrame = [self.window convertRect:[UIApplication sharedApplication].statusBarFrame toView:view];
You can then read statusBarFrame's height property directly. 'View' in this instance should be the view in which you wish to make use of the measurements, most likely the application window's root view controller.
Incidentally, not only may the status bar be taller during phone calls, it can also be zero if the status bar has been deliberately hidden.
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This didn't give me the correct height. But, I found different way that worked for me: stackoverflow.com/a/16598350/242933 May 16, 2013 at 22:12
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Yeah this is pretty old code now so is probably no longer a valid answer. Personally I no longer ever have any need to check the height of the status bar, thanks to auto layout.– AshJul 14, 2016 at 14:21
var statusHeight: CGFloat!
if #available(iOS 13.0, *) {
statusHeight = UIApplication.shared.keyWindow?.windowScene?.statusBarManager?.statusBarFrame.height
} else {
// Fallback on earlier versions
statusHeight = UIApplication.shared.statusBarFrame.height
}
Here is a Swift way to get screen status bar height:
var screenStatusBarHeight: CGFloat {
return UIApplication.sharedApplication().statusBarFrame.height
}
These are included as a standard function in a project of mine: https://github.com/goktugyil/EZSwiftExtensions
UIApplication.shared.statusBarFrame.height
was deprecated in iOS 13
'statusBarFrame' was deprecated in iOS 13.0: Use the statusBarManager property of the window scene instead.
You can retrieve status bar height in iOS 13 like follows:
let statusBarHeight = view.window?.windowScene?.statusBarManager?.statusBarFrame.height
NB! It's optional so make sure you have correct fallback.
By default Status Bar height in iOS is 20 pt
.
More info: http://www.idev101.com/code/User_Interface/sizes.html
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1
I just found a way that allow you not directly access the status bar height, but calculate it.
Navigation Bar height - topLayoutGuide length = status bar height
Swift:
let statusBarHeight = self.topLayoutGuide.length-self.navigationController?.navigationBar.frame.height
self.topLayoutGuide.length
is the top area that's covered by the translucent bar, and self.navigationController?.navigationBar.frame.height
is the translucent bar excluding status bar, which is usually 44pt. So by using this method you can easily calculate the status bar height without worring about status bar height change due to phone calls.
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This doesn't work,
self.topLayoutGuide.length
is 0 so the result ends up being -44.– nambateeOct 31, 2017 at 20:47 -
@nambatee I believe it doesn’t work anymore because I’m iOS 11 Apple uses safeAreaInsets Oct 31, 2017 at 21:01
Swift 5
UIApplication.shared.statusBarFrame.height
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3Could you please provide some context or an explanation on why this answers to the OP's question? Jul 24, 2020 at 14:37
Using following single line code you can get status bar height in any orientation and also if it is visible or not
#define STATUS_BAR_HIGHT (
[UIApplicationsharedApplication].statusBarHidden ? 0 : (
[UIApplicationsharedApplication].statusBarFrame.size.height > 100 ?
[UIApplicationsharedApplication].statusBarFrame.size.width :
[UIApplicationsharedApplication].statusBarFrame.size.height
)
)
It just a simple but very useful macro just try this you don't need to write any extra code