How can I create a UIColor
from a hexadecimal string format, such as #00FF00
?
-
Erica also has a great color extension category for iOS and OSX.– EchilonJun 9, 2013 at 13:55
-
Here is another library: github.com/burhanuddin353/TFTColor– Burhanuddin SunelwalaDec 25, 2016 at 20:20
50 Answers
For swift 2.0+. This code works fine to me.
extension UIColor {
/// UIColor(hexString: "#cc0000")
internal convenience init?(hexString:String) {
guard hexString.characters[hexString.startIndex] == Character("#") else {
return nil
}
guard hexString.characters.count == "#000000".characters.count else {
return nil
}
let digits = hexString.substringFromIndex(hexString.startIndex.advancedBy(1))
guard Int(digits,radix:16) != nil else{
return nil
}
let red = digits.substringToIndex(digits.startIndex.advancedBy(2))
let green = digits.substringWithRange(Range<String.Index>(start: digits.startIndex.advancedBy(2),
end: digits.startIndex.advancedBy(4)))
let blue = digits.substringWithRange(Range<String.Index>(start:digits.startIndex.advancedBy(4),
end:digits.startIndex.advancedBy(6)))
let redf = CGFloat(Double(Int(red, radix:16)!) / 255.0)
let greenf = CGFloat(Double(Int(green, radix:16)!) / 255.0)
let bluef = CGFloat(Double(Int(blue, radix:16)!) / 255.0)
self.init(red: redf, green: greenf, blue: bluef, alpha: CGFloat(1.0))
}
}
This code includes string format checking. e.g.
let aColor = UIColor(hexString: "#dadada")!
let failed = UIColor(hexString: "123zzzz")
And as far as I know, my code is of no disadvantage for its maintaining the semantic of failible condition and returning an optional value. And this should be the best answer.
Swift 2.0 - Xcode 7.2
Adding an extension to UIColor.
File -New - Swift File - Name it . Add the following.
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:
Ex. Setting Button's color from hexCode.
override func viewWillAppear(animated: Bool) {
loginButton.tintColor = UIColor(hexString: " hex code here ")
}
Ex. Converting Button's current color to hex Code.
override func viewWillAppear(animated: Bool) {
let hexString = loginButton.tintColor.toHexString()
print("HEX STRING: \(hexString)")
}
Swift 2.0 version of solution which will handle alpha value of color and with perfect error handling is here:
func RGBColor(hexColorStr : String) -> UIColor?{
var red:CGFloat = 0.0
var green:CGFloat = 0.0
var blue:CGFloat = 0.0
var alpha:CGFloat = 1.0
if hexColorStr.hasPrefix("#"){
let index = hexColorStr.startIndex.advancedBy(1)
let hex = hexColorStr.substringFromIndex(index)
let scanner = NSScanner(string: hex)
var hexValue: CUnsignedLongLong = 0
if scanner.scanHexLongLong(&hexValue)
{
if hex.characters.count == 6
{
red = CGFloat((hexValue & 0xFF0000) >> 16) / 255.0
green = CGFloat((hexValue & 0x00FF00) >> 8) / 255.0
blue = CGFloat(hexValue & 0x0000FF) / 255.0
}
else if hex.characters.count == 8
{
red = CGFloat((hexValue & 0xFF000000) >> 24) / 255.0
green = CGFloat((hexValue & 0x00FF0000) >> 16) / 255.0
blue = CGFloat((hexValue & 0x0000FF00) >> 8) / 255.0
alpha = CGFloat(hexValue & 0x000000FF) / 255.0
}
else
{
print("invalid hex code string, length should be 7 or 9", terminator: "")
return nil
}
}
else
{
print("scan hex error")
return nil
}
}
let color: UIColor = UIColor(red:CGFloat(red), green: CGFloat(green), blue:CGFloat(blue), alpha: alpha)
return color
}
//UIColorWithHexString
static UIColor * UIColorWithHexString(NSString *hex) {
unsigned int rgb = 0;
[[NSScanner scannerWithString:
[[hex uppercaseString] stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:
[[NSCharacterSet characterSetWithCharactersInString:@"0123456789ABCDEF"] invertedSet]]]
scanHexInt:&rgb];
return [UIColor colorWithRed:((CGFloat)((rgb & 0xFF0000) >> 16)) / 255.0
green:((CGFloat)((rgb & 0xFF00) >> 8)) / 255.0
blue:((CGFloat)(rgb & 0xFF)) / 255.0
alpha:1.0];
}
Usage
self.view.backgroundColor = UIColorWithHexString(@"#0F35C0");
UIColor Hex initialization
extension UIColor{
public convenience init(hex : String) {
var cString:String = hex.trimmingCharacters(in: .whitespacesAndNewlines).uppercased()
if (cString.hasPrefix("#")) {
cString.remove(at: cString.startIndex)
}
if ((cString.count) != 6) {
self.init(red: 1, green: 1, blue: 1, alpha: 1)
return
}
var rgbValue:UInt32 = 0
Scanner(string: cString).scanHexInt32(&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)
)
}
//Iniitailization
let myColor = UIColor(hex: "#452b4e")
Happy coding ! Enjoy !!!!!!
The most posted solutions uses Scanner
, but you don't really need it at lease in the modern Swift. Instead you can simple use UInt
init with radix 16 and then use basic binary operations to get UIColor
components:
func stringToColor(color: String) -> UIColor {
guard let i = UInt(color, radix: 16) else {
return UIColor.white
}
return UIColor(
red: CGFloat((i & 0xFF0000) >> 16) / 255.0,
green: CGFloat((i & 0xFF00) >> 8) / 255.0,
blue: CGFloat(i & 0xFF) / 255.0,
alpha: 1.0
)
}
This solution expects input like "FF00FF", you may need to remove leading hash symbol (#) if you have one in your string.
-
What should
color
be inUInt(color, radix: 16)
? It cannot be found in scope. May 7, 2022 at 10:48 -
1I'm sorry, the
color
actually a function parameter name, I fixed the code above. Thanks. May 13, 2022 at 19:15
Swift version:
extension UIColor {
convenience init?(var hex: String) {
hex = hex.stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet(NSCharacterSet.whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet()).uppercaseString
hex = (hex.hasPrefix("#")) ? hex.substringFromIndex(advance(hex.startIndex, 1)) : hex
var value: UInt32 = 0
if NSScanner(string: hex).scanHexInt(&value) {
if count(hex) == 8 {
self.init(red: CGFloat((value & 0xFF000000) >> 24) / 255.0,
green: CGFloat((value & 0x00FF0000) >> 16) / 255.0,
blue: CGFloat((value & 0x0000FF00) >> 8) / 255.0,
alpha: CGFloat((value & 0x000000FF)) / 255.0)
return
} else if count(hex) == 6 {
self.init(red: CGFloat((value & 0xFF0000) >> 16) / 255.0,
green: CGFloat((value & 0x00FF00) >> 8) / 255.0,
blue: CGFloat(value & 0x0000FF) / 255.0,
alpha: 1.0)
return
}
}
self.init()
return nil
}
}
Try this: This code will return UIColor
from your hex color string
- (UIColor*)colorWithHexString:(NSString*)hex
{
NSString *cString = [[hex stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet]] uppercaseString];
// String should be 6 or 8 characters
if ([cString length] < 6) return [UIColor grayColor];
// strip 0X if it appears
if ([cString hasPrefix:@"0X"]) cString = [cString substringFromIndex:2];
if ([cString length] != 6) return [UIColor grayColor];
// Separate into r, g, b substrings
NSRange range;
range.location = 0;
range.length = 2;
NSString *rString = [cString substringWithRange:range];
range.location = 2;
NSString *gString = [cString substringWithRange:range];
range.location = 4;
NSString *bString = [cString substringWithRange:range];
// Scan values
unsigned int r, g, b;
[[NSScanner scannerWithString:rString] scanHexInt:&r];
[[NSScanner scannerWithString:gString] scanHexInt:&g];
[[NSScanner scannerWithString:bString] scanHexInt:&b];
return [UIColor colorWithRed:((float) r / 255.0f)
green:((float) g / 255.0f)
blue:((float) b / 255.0f)
alpha:1.0f];
}
Polished Extension from the original answer by @Tom feel free to update the code here
extension UIColor{
convenience init (hexString:String) {
var cleanString:String = hexString.stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet(NSCharacterSet.whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet()).uppercaseString
if (cleanString.hasPrefix("#")) {
cleanString = cleanString.substringFromIndex(cleanString.startIndex.advancedBy(1))
}
if (cleanString.characters.count != 6) {
self.init()
}
else{
var rgbValue = UInt32()
let scanner = NSScanner(string: cleanString)
scanner.scanHexInt(&rgbValue)
self.init(
red: CGFloat((rgbValue & 0xFF0000) >> 16)/255.0,
green: CGFloat((rgbValue & 0xFF00) >> 8)/255.0,
blue: CGFloat(rgbValue & 0xFF)/255.0,
alpha: 1.0)
}
}
}
-
This is pretty good, but I think it really needs to return an optional UIColor, and check to see if scanHexInt fails (returns boolean). If I pass in a HexString I'm not sure I want to get back some oddly defined UIColor that may have only had .init() called with no real values! Nov 30, 2015 at 3:50
Swift 2.0:
Add this method to VC or to Extension of UIColor.
func colorWithHexString (hex:String) -> UIColor {
var cString:String = hex.stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet(NSCharacterSet.whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet()).uppercaseString
if (cString.hasPrefix("#")) {
cString = (cString as NSString).substringFromIndex(1)
}
if (cString.characters.count != 6) {
return UIColor.grayColor()
}
let rString = (cString as NSString).substringToIndex(2)
let gString = ((cString as NSString).substringFromIndex(2) as NSString).substringToIndex(2)
let bString = ((cString as NSString).substringFromIndex(4) as NSString).substringToIndex(2)
var r:CUnsignedInt = 0, g:CUnsignedInt = 0, b:CUnsignedInt = 0;
NSScanner(string: rString).scanHexInt(&r)
NSScanner(string: gString).scanHexInt(&g)
NSScanner(string: bString).scanHexInt(&b)
return UIColor(red: CGFloat(r) / 255.0, green: CGFloat(g) / 255.0, blue: CGFloat(b) / 255.0, alpha: CGFloat(1))
}
Usage :
loginButton.tintColor = self.colorWithHexString("#be1337")
OR
let hexColor = self.colorWithHexString("#be1337")
Convert hex color to RGB value using any converter website (if you google "hex to rgb", you'll see a ton). For example, this one: http://www.rgbtohex.net/hextorgb/
Then change the color property to UIColor. Example:
self.profilePicture.layer.borderColor = [UIColor colorWithRed:0 green:167 blue:142 alpha:1.0].CGColor;
Hex color value was: 00a78e converted to RGB: R: 0 G: 167 B: 142
If the RGB values you are giving are not between 0 and 1.0, you'll have to divide them by 255. Example:
self.profilePicture.layer.borderColor = [UIColor colorWithRed:83.00/255.0 green:123.00/255.0 blue:53.00/255.0 alpha:1.0].CGColor;
You can use this library
https://github.com/burhanuddin353/TFTColor
Swift
UIColor.colorWithRGB(hexString: "FF34AE" alpha: 1.0)
Objective-C
[UIColor colorWithRGBHexString:@"FF34AE" alpha:1.0f]
Swift 3 example of Ethan Strider's answer. A function that takes a hex string and returns a UIColor.
(You can enter hex strings with either format: #ffffff
or ffffff
)
Example:
func hexStringToUIColor (hex:String) -> UIColor {
var cString: String = hex.trimmingCharacters(in: CharacterSet.whitespacesAndNewlines).uppercased()
if (cString.hasPrefix("#")) {
if let range = cString.range(of: cString) {
cString = cString.substring(from: cString.index(range.lowerBound, offsetBy: 1))
}
}
if ((cString.characters.count) != 6) {
return UIColor.gray
}
var rgbValue: UInt32 = 0
Scanner(string: cString).scanHexInt32(&rgbValue)
return UIColor(
red: CGFloat((rgbValue & 0xFF0000) >> 16) / 255.0,
green: CGFloat((rgbValue & 0x00FF00) >> 8) / 255.0,
blue: CGFloat(rgbValue & 0x0000FF) / 255.0,
alpha: CGFloat(1.0)
)
}
Usage:
var color1 = hexStringToUIColor("#d3d3d3")
In Xamarin.iOS you can use the following instead of the macro:
public UIColor UIColorFromHexValue(int value, float alpha = 1f) =>
UIColor.FromRGBA(
((value & 0xFF0000) >> 16) / 255.0f,
((value & 0x00FF00) >> 16) / 255.0f,
((value & 0x0000FF) >> 16) / 255.0f,
alpha);
The usage is analogous:
label.TextColor = UIColorFromHexValue(0xBC1128);
Posting for reference a site I just found. It does all the dirty job and, starting from HEX or RGB, prints out the code in ObjC, Swift and Xamarin.
There is a nice UIColor category with many features in it.
Usage:
textView.textColor = [UIColor colorWithHexString:textColorHex];
NSLog(@"Text Color Hex: %@", textColorHex);
Where textColorHex has a form of @"FFFFFF" without # symbol.
Several above solutions involve somewhat unnecessary use of NSStrings. This UIColor class extension is bit simpler & faster:
+ colorWithHex:(UInt32)hex alpha:(CGFloat)alpha
{
return [UIColor colorWithRed:((hex & 0xFF0000) >> 16)/255.0
green:((hex & 0x00FF00) >> 8)/255.0
blue:( hex & 0x0000FF)/255.0
alpha:alpha];
}
and to use it simply:
return [UIColor colorWithHex:0x006400 alpha:1.0]; // HTML darkgreen
-
Downvote with no comment helps nobody. So, <anonymous>, if you take issue with my specifically not using NSStrings, please note that by far-and-above the top-rated answer to this question, courtesy of Tom, does likewise. And IMHO a UIColor class extension is just a cleaner solution than a #define. The only possible reason I could think of needing to convert hex color codes in an NSString would be if you are trying to parse an HTML stream, at which point you should probably look into init'ing an NSAttributedString with a NSHTMLTextDocumentType, and let it tool handle all the markups.– tiriteaMar 13, 2017 at 3:56
In swift I created a class extension with the following methods to convert a hex code to a UIColor.
extension UIColor {
convenience init(R: CGFloat, G: CGFloat, B: CGFloat, alpha: CGFloat) {
self.init(red: R/255.0, green: G/255.0, blue: B/255.0, alpha: alpha)
}
class func colorWithHex(hex: UInt, alpha: CGFloat) -> UIColor {
return UIColor(R: CGFloat((hex & 0xFF0000) >> 16), G: CGFloat((hex & 0x00FF00) >> 8), B: CGFloat(hex & 0x0000FF), alpha: alpha)
}
}
Use Xcode's native Color Literals feature to add hex colors easily and natively.
Type Color Literal
into your code and let Xcode autocomplete do the rest.
The color picker UI will allow you to paste in a Hex Color: #FF9300
The git diff of the macro will show RGB values rather than hex:
let orange = #colorLiteral(red: 1, green: 0.5763723254, blue: 0, alpha: 1)
But it's still an easy way to paste in hex without any 3rd party tools or extensions.
Most answers use Scanner
, bitmasks, or substring operations.
It's also possible to extract the color components using chunks(ofCount:)
and UInt8.init(_:radix:)
:
import Foundation
import XCTest
import Algorithms
class UIColorFromStringTests: XCTestCase {
func testUIColorFromString() throws {
let color = "00FF00"
let components = color
.chunks(ofCount: 2)
.compactMap { UInt8($0, radix: 16) }
XCTAssertEqual(components, [0x00, 0xFF, 0x00])
let red = CGFloat(components[0]) / 255 // 0
let green = CGFloat(components[1]) / 255 // 1
let blue = CGFloat(components[2]) / 255 // 0
_ = UIColor(red: red, green: green, blue: blue, alpha: 1)
}
}