I need to search some strings and set some attributes prior to merging the strings, so having NSStrings -> Concatenate them -> Make NSAttributedString is not an option, is there any way to concatenate attributedString to another attributedString?
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17It is ridiculous how difficult this still is in August of 2016.– Wedge MartinAug 12, 2016 at 5:10
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21Even in 2018...– DehMotthMar 22, 2018 at 14:24
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15still in 2019 ;)– raistlinFeb 28, 2019 at 11:03
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20still in 2020 ...– Hwangho KimMar 17, 2020 at 5:41
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7Ah... two weeks before 2021! Merry Christmas all of us ;)– Sapozhnik IvanDec 12, 2020 at 23:06
8 Answers
I'd recommend you use a single mutable attributed string a @Linuxios suggested, and here's another example of that:
NSMutableAttributedString *mutableAttString = [[NSMutableAttributedString alloc] init];
NSString *plainString = // ...
NSDictionary *attributes = // ... a dictionary with your attributes.
NSAttributedString *newAttString = [[NSAttributedString alloc] initWithString:plainString attributes:attributes];
[mutableAttString appendAttributedString:newAttString];
However, just for the sake of getting all the options out there, you could also create a single mutable attributed string, made from a formatted NSString containing the input strings already put together. You could then use addAttributes: range:
to add the attributes after the fact to the ranges containing the input strings. I recommend the former way though.
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1Why do you recommend appending strings instead of adding attributes? Aug 8, 2017 at 3:45
If you're using Swift, you can just overload the +
operator so that you can concatenate them in the same way you concatenate normal strings:
// concatenate attributed strings
func + (left: NSAttributedString, right: NSAttributedString) -> NSAttributedString
{
let result = NSMutableAttributedString()
result.append(left)
result.append(right)
return result
}
Now you can concatenate them just by adding them:
let helloworld = NSAttributedString(string: "Hello ") + NSAttributedString(string: "World")
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5
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4You can use the mutable subtype in any context that expects the immutable parent type but not vice versa. You may want to review subclassing and inheritance.– algalNov 15, 2015 at 18:25
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6Yes, you should do a defensive copy if you want to be defensive. (Not sarcasm.)– algalNov 15, 2015 at 18:42
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1If you really want to return NSAttributedString, then perhaps this would work:
return NSAttributedString(attributedString: result)
– AlexSep 16, 2016 at 10:29 -
2@n13 I would create a folder called
Helpers
orExtensions
and put this function in a file namedNSAttributedString+Concatenate.swift
. Nov 20, 2016 at 8:55
Swift 3: Simply create a NSMutableAttributedString and append the attributed strings to them.
let mutableAttributedString = NSMutableAttributedString()
let boldAttribute = [
NSFontAttributeName: UIFont(name: "GothamPro-Medium", size: 13)!,
NSForegroundColorAttributeName: Constants.defaultBlackColor
]
let regularAttribute = [
NSFontAttributeName: UIFont(name: "Gotham Pro", size: 13)!,
NSForegroundColorAttributeName: Constants.defaultBlackColor
]
let boldAttributedString = NSAttributedString(string: "Warning: ", attributes: boldAttribute)
let regularAttributedString = NSAttributedString(string: "All tasks within this project will be deleted. If you're sure you want to delete all tasks and this project, type DELETE to confirm.", attributes: regularAttribute)
mutableAttributedString.append(boldAttributedString)
mutableAttributedString.append(regularAttributedString)
descriptionTextView.attributedText = mutableAttributedString
swift5 upd:
let captionAttribute = [
NSAttributedString.Key.font: Font.captionsRegular,
NSAttributedString.Key.foregroundColor: UIColor.appGray
]
Try this:
NSMutableAttributedString* result = [astring1 mutableCopy];
[result appendAttributedString:astring2];
Where astring1
and astring2
are NSAttributedString
s.
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13
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@JWWalker your 'oneliner' is corrupted. you can't get this "concatenation" result because appendAttributedString doesn't return string. Same story with dictionaries Nov 12, 2015 at 13:14
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@gaussblurinc: good point, of course your criticism also applies to the answer we're commenting on. It should be
NSMutableAttributedString* aString3 = [aString1 mutableCopy]; [aString3 appendAttributedString: aString2];
.– JWWalkerNov 12, 2015 at 15:55 -
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@Linuxios, also, you return
result
asNSMutableAttributedString
. it is not what author want to see.stringByAppendingString
- this method will be good Nov 12, 2015 at 16:57
2020 | SWIFT 5.1:
You're able to add 2 NSMutableAttributedString
by the following way:
let concatenated = NSAttrStr1.append(NSAttrStr2)
Another way works with NSMutableAttributedString
and NSAttributedString
both:
[NSAttrStr1, NSAttrStr2].joinWith(separator: "")
Another way is....
var full = NSAttrStr1 + NSAttrStr2 + NSAttrStr3
and:
var full = NSMutableAttributedString(string: "hello ")
// NSAttrStr1 == 1
full += NSAttrStr1 // full == "hello 1"
full += " world" // full == "hello 1 world"
You can do this with the following extension:
// works with NSAttributedString and NSMutableAttributedString!
public extension NSAttributedString {
static func + (left: NSAttributedString, right: NSAttributedString) -> NSAttributedString {
let leftCopy = NSMutableAttributedString(attributedString: left)
leftCopy.append(right)
return leftCopy
}
static func + (left: NSAttributedString, right: String) -> NSAttributedString {
let leftCopy = NSMutableAttributedString(attributedString: left)
let rightAttr = NSMutableAttributedString(string: right)
leftCopy.append(rightAttr)
return leftCopy
}
static func + (left: String, right: NSAttributedString) -> NSAttributedString {
let leftAttr = NSMutableAttributedString(string: left)
leftAttr.append(right)
return leftAttr
}
}
public extension NSMutableAttributedString {
static func += (left: NSMutableAttributedString, right: String) -> NSMutableAttributedString {
let rightAttr = NSMutableAttributedString(string: right)
left.append(rightAttr)
return left
}
static func += (left: NSMutableAttributedString, right: NSAttributedString) -> NSMutableAttributedString {
left.append(right)
return left
}
}
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2I'm using Swift 5.1 and I can't seem to just add two NSAttrStrings together... Feb 25, 2020 at 16:49
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1
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Updated my answer with extensions for just adding two NSAttrStrings :)– AndrewApr 16, 2020 at 3:13
If you're using Cocoapods, an alternative to both above answers that let you avoid mutability in your own code is to use the excellent NSAttributedString+CCLFormat category on NSAttributedString
s that lets you write something like:
NSAttributedString *first = ...;
NSAttributedString *second = ...;
NSAttributedString *combined = [NSAttributedString attributedStringWithFormat:@"%@%@", first, second];
It of course it just uses NSMutableAttributedString
under the covers.
It also has the extra advantage of being a fully fledged formatting function — so it can do a lot more than appending strings together.
// Immutable approach
// class method
+ (NSAttributedString *)stringByAppendingString:(NSAttributedString *)append toString:(NSAttributedString *)string {
NSMutableAttributedString *result = [string mutableCopy];
[result appendAttributedString:append];
NSAttributedString *copy = [result copy];
return copy;
}
//Instance method
- (NSAttributedString *)stringByAppendingString:(NSAttributedString *)append {
NSMutableAttributedString *result = [self mutableCopy];
[result appendAttributedString:append];
NSAttributedString *copy = [result copy];
return copy;
}
You can try SwiftyFormat It uses following syntax
let format = "#{{user}} mentioned you in a comment. #{{comment}}"
let message = NSAttributedString(format: format,
attributes: commonAttributes,
mapping: ["user": attributedName, "comment": attributedComment])
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1