53

My bundle display name is "Standford 2015" in Xcode but it is showing on my iPhone as "Standford2015" when it's installed.

Am I doing anything wrong?

4

11 Answers 11

62

For iOS 11 you can open the info.plist as source code and use   instead of spaces

5
42
  1. Open the info.plist file as SourceCode.
  2. Use &#x2007 ; as separator for the space in CFBundleDisplayName.

Example

<key>CFBundleDisplayName</key>
<string>App&#x2007;Name</string>
3
  • 2
    It seems like double space
    – K.Amanov
    Aug 30, 2021 at 12:02
  • not worked for me
    – Ucdemir
    Nov 5, 2022 at 15:27
  • this does not work
    – Jim
    Jun 12, 2023 at 21:27
15

I'd actually recommend using &#x0020; instead of &#x2007;. The latter is a "figure space" which looks awkward compared to the former, which is simply a space. See comparison below:

Comparison

3
  • 8
    &#x0020; doesnt work for me
    – Tobias
    Jan 3, 2022 at 16:10
  • Using 0020 allows iOS to show several more characters of your app name than 2007.
    – LBC
    Feb 24, 2022 at 22:24
  • neither of these work
    – Jim
    Jun 12, 2023 at 21:27
7

In your localized InfoPlist.string DO NOT use spaces but instead use unicode character "No-break space" :

http://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/00a0/index.htm

so your line in InfoPlist.string should look like :

"CFBundleDisplayName" = "My\U00A0app";

2
  • 5
    In your InfoPlist.strings, use the character \U2007 ("figure space") rather than the "no-break space".
    – Jleuleu
    Apr 8, 2020 at 12:53
  • Thanks, in my info.plist I loaded the name from my build settings, &#x2007; did not work for me but \U2007 did.
    – HartWoom
    Jan 21, 2022 at 12:02
4

I resolved this issue by replacing space with unicode symbol like NB space.

I presented a little instruction in this post.

3

This could also be caused by the app icon title character limit. e.g. if app name exceeds 12 chars (I think), spaces are removed on build.

1
  • This is the correct answer. 13 characters worked for me (iOS 17) Jan 25 at 10:19
0

Use plist CFBundleDisplayName to set the space below the icon.

More info: What's the difference between "bundle display name" and "bundle name" in cocoa application's info plist

2
  • How is this different from what I said?
    – matt
    Feb 19, 2016 at 1:57
  • @matt notice the link to more info which explains other edge cases. Feb 20, 2016 at 17:11
0

I'm using 3 spaces in app name string (in place of one space) in Info.plist and it works for me:

<key>CFBundleDisplayName</key>
<string>App   Name</string>
0

This worked for me: &#x2002;

&#x2007; looks like 2 or 3 spaces

0

For Info.plist this is what worked for me: &#x2002;

and for localized InfoPlist.strings this is what worked for me: \U2002

and I tried all the options above.

-1

Possible workaround: use localizable InfoPlist.strings file with content:

/* Localized versions of Info.plist keys */
"CFBundleDisplayName" = "Standford 2015";
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