55

I am drawing UILabels programmatically. They get their sizes from a database. So I cannot just use sizeToFit. I have already implemented a function that redraws UILabels with a passed ratio. So all I need to find is the text in UILabel from my view that would require the maximum ratio to redraw UILabels. So finally I need to do something like this:

    double ratio = 1.00;
    for (UILabel* labels in sec.subviews) {

        float widthLabel = labels.frame.size.width;
        float heightLabel = labels.frame.size.height;
        float heightText = //get the text height here
        float widthText = //get the text width here
        if (widthLabel < widthText) {
            ratio = MAX(widthText/widthLabel,ratio);
        }
        if (heightLabel < heightText) {
            ratio = MAX(heightText/heightLabel, ratio);
        }
    }
    //redraw UILabels with the given ratio here

So how can I get the height and width size of a text, as some of my text do not fit into the label I cannot simply use label bounds? I am using Xcode 5 and iOS 7.

12 Answers 12

69

All of the [NSString sizeWithFont...] methods are deprecated in iOS 7. Use this instead.

CGRect labelRect = [text
                    boundingRectWithSize:labelSize
                    options:NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin
                    attributes:@{
                     NSFontAttributeName : [UIFont systemFontOfSize:14]
                    }
                    context:nil];

Also see https://developer.apple.com/documentation/foundation/nsstring/1619914-sizewithfont.

UPDATE - example of boundingRectWithSize output

Per your comment I did a simple test. The code and output is below.

// code to generate a bounding rect for text at various font sizes
NSString *text = @"This is a long sentence. Wonder how much space is needed?";
for (NSNumber *n in @[@(12.0f), @(14.0f), @(18.0f)]) {
    CGFloat fontSize = [n floatValue];
    CGRect r = [text boundingRectWithSize:CGSizeMake(200, 0)
                                  options:NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin
                               attributes:@{NSFontAttributeName:[UIFont systemFontOfSize:fontSize]}
                                  context:nil];
    NSLog(@"fontSize = %f\tbounds = (%f x %f)",
          fontSize,
          r.size.width,
          r.size.height);
}

this produces the following output (note that the bounds change as expected as the font size gets larger):

fontSize = 12.000000    bounds = (181.152008 x 28.632000)
fontSize = 14.000000    bounds = (182.251999 x 50.105999)
fontSize = 18.000000    bounds = (194.039993 x 64.421997)
16
  • Is there a way to get font size of a UILabel text or do I have to hardcode it?
    – Sarp Kaya
    Oct 2, 2013 at 2:07
  • Not sure I understand your question. label.font.pointSize will give you the font size for a label. If you are asking how to know what font size to use when computing bounds without having the label object, then yes, you have to code that the same way you code setting up the font for the label (i.e. however you want for your app).
    – XJones
    Oct 2, 2013 at 4:23
  • Your solution does not really work, When I make UIFont size 18 I am getting "{49.337997, 42.947998}" sizes for my text. When I make it 14 then the result is "{55.244003, 50.105999}" if I make it 12 then it is "{47.736, 42.947998}". So for some reason it does not give the accurate size.
    – Sarp Kaya
    Oct 3, 2013 at 0:26
  • Also if I make label.font then I am getting {46.390137, 51.089844}. By the way this is overflowing within the current label sized as {53,53} and I need to get something like {75,75} in order for the ratio to be precise.
    – Sarp Kaya
    Oct 3, 2013 at 0:33
  • I don't know what else you are doing in your code. This function does accurately give you the rect needed to display text with the given attributes. I use it extensively for exactly this purpose. It's not really "my solution", this is Apple's defined method. I just alerted you to it.
    – XJones
    Oct 3, 2013 at 18:18
50

Length gets the number of characters. If you want to get the width of the text:

Objective-C

CGSize textSize = [label.text sizeWithAttributes:@{NSFontAttributeName:[label font]}];

Swift 4

let size = label.text?.size(withAttributes: [.font: label.font]) ?? .zero

This gets you the size. And you can compare the textSize.width of each label.

5
  • 2
    This should be the best answer.
    – Amr Lotfy
    Jan 28, 2016 at 5:42
  • 4
    please note that this doesn't work with multiple lines UILabel Aug 10, 2016 at 11:07
  • 1
    @DaronTancharoen do you have a solution for multiple lines? I didn't need it before so if you found a solution we can edit the answer . Aug 15, 2016 at 15:14
  • There should be some size calculation considering the new line characters as well. Sep 21, 2018 at 9:14
  • @DaronTancharoen see my answer below for multiline labels.
    – chrisben
    Nov 20, 2018 at 15:41
30

Another simple way to do this that I haven't seen mentioned yet:

CGSize textSize = [label intrinsicContentSize];

(This only works correctly after you have set the label's text and font, of course.)

2
  • 2
    This is the right answer for me. The boundingRectWithSize sometimes provided incorrect sizes.
    – William T.
    Jan 24, 2016 at 21:19
  • 1
    Best answer so far Mar 7, 2017 at 14:29
18

Here is a swift variant.

let font = UIFont(name: "HelveticaNeue", size: 25)!
let text = "This is some really long text just to test how it works for calculating heights in swift of string sizes. What if I add a couple lines of text?"

let textString = text as NSString

let textAttributes = [NSFontAttributeName: font]

textString.boundingRectWithSize(CGSizeMake(320, 2000), options: .UsesLineFragmentOrigin, attributes: textAttributes, context: nil)
3
  • Thank you, this is the all-around solution I was looking for. It does not even require a UILabel. It can be used with any string.
    – DrZ214
    Jan 8, 2016 at 21:29
  • 1
    Didn't seem to work with UILabel. So I used UITextView and it did the trick. Sep 4, 2016 at 20:21
  • I had some issues with getting a consistent line count from an autosizing UITextView in a TableViewCell and this was the only approach that worked. Thanks!
    – rmooney
    Oct 14, 2016 at 4:38
3

Little advice guys, if like me you're using, boundingRectWithSize with [UIFont systemFontOFSize:14]

If your string is two lines long, the returned rect height is something like 33,4 points.

Don't make the mistake, like me, to cast it into an int, because 33,4 becomes 33, and 33 points height label pass from two to one line!

3
  • 1
    I'd suggest never working with int for screen sizes or location, just stick to CGFloat. Jun 7, 2016 at 5:17
  • @ErikvanderNeut totally agree. And working with Swift will force you to do that!
    – Martin
    Jun 7, 2016 at 8:21
  • 1
    In swift you can still use CGFloat (e.g. var x:CGFloat = 14)
    – shim
    Jun 15, 2016 at 18:51
2

The problem with

CGRect r = [text boundingRectWithSize:CGSizeMake(200, 0)
                              options:NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin
                           attributes:@{NSFontAttributeName:[UIFont systemFontOfSize:fontSize]}
                              context:nil];

is boundingRectWithSize which determines the maximum value that CGRect can have.

My solution for this problem is to check if it exceeds, if not then text can fit into the label. I did it by using loops.

NSString *text = @"This is a long sentence. Wonder how much space is needed?";
CGFloat width = 100;
CGFloat height = 100;
bool sizeFound = false;
while (!sizeFound) {
    NSLog(@"Begin loop");
    CGFloat fontSize = 14;
    CGFloat previousSize = 0.0;
    CGFloat currSize = 0.0;
    for (float fSize = fontSize; fSize < fontSize+6; fSize++) {
        CGRect r = [text boundingRectWithSize:CGSizeMake(width, height)
                                      options:NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin
                                   attributes:@{NSFontAttributeName:[UIFont systemFontOfSize:fSize]}
                                      context:nil];
        currSize =r.size.width*r.size.height;
        if (previousSize >= currSize) {
            width = width*11/10;
            height = height*11/10;
            fSize = fontSize+10;
        }
        else {
            previousSize = currSize;
        }
        NSLog(@"fontSize = %f\tbounds = (%f x %f) = %f",
              fSize,
              r.size.width,
              r.size.height,r.size.width*r.size.height);
    }
    if (previousSize == currSize) {
        sizeFound = true;
    }

}
NSLog(@"Size found with width %f and height %f", width, height);

After each iteration the size of height and width increments 10% of its value.

The reason why I picked 6 is because I did not want the label to be too squishy.

For a solution that does not use loops:

NSString *text = @"This is a long sentence. Wonder how much space is needed?";
CGFloat width = 100;
CGFloat height = 100;

CGFloat currentFontSize = 12;
CGRect r1 = [text boundingRectWithSize:CGSizeMake(width, height)
                              options:NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin
                           attributes:@{NSFontAttributeName:[UIFont systemFontOfSize:currentFontSize+6]}
                              context:nil];

CGRect r2 = [text boundingRectWithSize:CGSizeMake(width, height)
                               options:NSStringDrawingUsesFontLeading
                            attributes:@{NSFontAttributeName:[UIFont systemFontOfSize:currentFontSize+6]}
                               context:nil];

CGFloat firstVal =r1.size.width*r1.size.height;
CGFloat secondVal =r2.size.width*r2.size.height;

NSLog(@"First val %f and second val is %f", firstVal, secondVal);

if (secondVal > firstVal) {
    float initRat = secondVal/firstVal;

    float ratioToBeMult = sqrtf(initRat);

    width *= ratioToBeMult;
    height *= ratioToBeMult;
}

NSLog(@"Final width %f and height %f", width, height);

//for verifying
for (NSNumber *n in @[@(12.0f), @(14.0f), @(17.0f)]) {
    CGFloat fontSize = [n floatValue];
    CGRect r = [text boundingRectWithSize:CGSizeMake(width, height)
                                  options:NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin
                               attributes:@{NSFontAttributeName:[UIFont systemFontOfSize:fontSize]}
                                  context:nil];
    NSLog(@"fontSize = %f\tbounds = (%f x %f) = %f",
          fontSize,
          r.size.width,
          r.size.height,r.size.width*r.size.height);
    firstVal =r.size.width*r.size.height;
}

Where the last loop is proof that larger font can give a higher size result.

2

A solution that works with multiline labels (Swift 4), to calculate the height from a fixed width:

let label = UILabel(frame: .zero)
label.numberOfLines = 0 // multiline
label.font = UIFont.systemFont(ofSize: UIFont.labelFontSize) // your font
label.preferredMaxLayoutWidth = width // max width
label.text = "This is a sample text.\nWith a second line!" // the text to display in the label

let height = label.intrinsicContentSize.height
1
  • This is actually a better solution for a lot of use cases.
    – SmileBot
    Jul 11, 2019 at 16:24
1

By using this line of code we can get the size of text on the label.

let str = "Sample text"
let size = str.sizeWithAttributes([NSFontAttributeName:UIFont.systemFontOfSize(17.0)])

So, we can use the both width and height.

3
  • u need to provide the font used in your app Oct 24, 2019 at 10:15
  • i used system font 16, but i need set font 26 in code to get width
    – famfamfam
    Oct 25, 2019 at 2:43
  • my text is "UNKNOWN", but set font 16 -> get 68.5 width, so can only display "UN" When set font 26, it's display full "UNKNOWN"
    – famfamfam
    Oct 25, 2019 at 2:44
0

msgStr string get size :

let msgStr:NSString = Data["msg"]! as NSString
let messageSize = msgStr.boundingRect(with: CGSize(width: ChatTable.frame.width-116, height: CGFloat.infinity), options: .usesLineFragmentOrigin, attributes: [NSFontAttributeName:UIFont(name: "Montserrat-Light", size: 14)!], context: nil).size
0

Swift 3.0

func getLabelHeight() -> CGFloat {
    let font = UIFont(name: "OpenSans", size: 15)!
    let textString = "Lorem ipsum dolor sit er elit lamet, consectetaur cillium adipisicing pecu, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua." as NSString

    let textAttributes = [NSFontAttributeName: font]

    let rect = textString.boundingRect(with: CGSize(width: 320, height: 2000), options: .usesLineFragmentOrigin, attributes: textAttributes, context: nil)
    return rect.size.height
}
0

It's a really ugly mess given that if you set UILabel font after you have set it with attributedString it clobbers the font info in attributed text and you have to compute based on text+font attributes

Something to the tune of

    CGFloat promptLabelMaxWidth = self.promptLabel.frame.size.width;
    NSAttributedString *attributedText = self.promptLabel.attributedText;
    assert(attributedText);
    CGRect rect = [attributedText boundingRectWithSize:(CGSize){promptLabelMaxWidth, CGFLOAT_MAX} options: NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin context:nil];
    NSString *text = self.promptLabel.text;
    UIFont *font = self.promptLabel.font;
    if (font) {
        CGRect r = [text boundingRectWithSize: CGSizeMake(promptLabelMaxWidth, CGFLOAT_MAX)
                                          options:NSStringDrawingUsesLineFragmentOrigin
                                       attributes:@{NSFontAttributeName: font}
                                          context:nil];
        if (r.size.height > rect.size.height) {
            rect = r;
        }
    }
0

Swift 5:

 func getTextBounds(_ label : UILabel) -> CGRect {
    if label.text != nil && label.font != nil {
        return label.text!.boundingRect(
                      with: CGSize(width: 450, height: 44),
                      options: [],
                      attributes: [NSAttributedString.Key.font : label.font!],
                      context: nil)
    }
    return CGRect.null
}


 func getTextBounds(_ textField : UITextField) -> CGRect {
    if textField.text != nil && textField.font != nil {
        return textField.text!.boundingRect(
                      with: CGSize(width: 450, height: 44),
                      options: [],
                      attributes: [NSAttributedString.Key.font : textField.font!],
                      context: nil)
    }
    return CGRect.null
}

Or, as extensions:

extension UILabel {
    func textBounds() -> CGRect {
        if self.text != nil && self.font != nil {
            return self.text!.boundingRect(
                          with: CGSize(width: 450, height: 44),
                          options: [],
                          attributes: [NSAttributedString.Key.font : self.font!],
                          context: nil)
        }
        return CGRect.null
    }
}

extension UITextField {
    func textBounds() -> CGRect {
        if self.text != nil && self.font != nil {
            return self.text!.boundingRect(
                          with: CGSize(width: 450, height: 44),
                          options: [],
                          attributes: [NSAttributedString.Key.font : self.font!],
                          context: nil)
        }
        return CGRect.null
    }
}

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