There's no way to set the vertical-align on a UILabel
, but you can get the same effect by changing the label's frame. I've made my labels orange so you can see clearly what's happening.
Here's the quick and easy way to do this:
[myLabel sizeToFit];
If you have a label with longer text that will make more than one line, set numberOfLines
to 0
(zero here means an unlimited number of lines).
myLabel.numberOfLines = 0;
[myLabel sizeToFit];
Longer Version
I'll make my label in code so that you can see what's going on. You can set up most of this in Interface Builder too. My setup is a View-Based App with a background image I made in Photoshop to show margins (20 points). The label is an attractive orange color so you can see what's going on with the dimensions.
- (void)viewDidLoad
{
[super viewDidLoad];
// 20 point top and left margin. Sized to leave 20 pt at right.
CGRect labelFrame = CGRectMake(20, 20, 280, 150);
UILabel *myLabel = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:labelFrame];
[myLabel setBackgroundColor:[UIColor orangeColor]];
NSString *labelText = @"I am the very model of a modern Major-General, I've information vegetable, animal, and mineral";
[myLabel setText:labelText];
// Tell the label to use an unlimited number of lines
[myLabel setNumberOfLines:0];
[myLabel sizeToFit];
[self.view addSubview:myLabel];
}
Some limitations of using sizeToFit
come into play with center- or right-aligned text. Here's what happens:
// myLabel.textAlignment = NSTextAlignmentRight;
myLabel.textAlignment = NSTextAlignmentCenter;
[myLabel setNumberOfLines:0];
[myLabel sizeToFit];
The label is still sized with a fixed top-left corner. You can save the original label's width in a variable and set it after sizeToFit
, or give it a fixed width to counter these problems:
myLabel.textAlignment = NSTextAlignmentCenter;
[myLabel setNumberOfLines:0];
[myLabel sizeToFit];
CGRect myFrame = myLabel.frame;
// Resize the frame's width to 280 (320 - margins)
// width could also be myOriginalLabelFrame.size.width
myFrame = CGRectMake(myFrame.origin.x, myFrame.origin.y, 280, myFrame.size.height);
myLabel.frame = myFrame;
Note that sizeToFit
will respect your initial label's minimum width. If you start with a label 100 wide and call sizeToFit
on it, it will give you back a (possibly very tall) label with 100 (or a little less) width. You might want to set your label to the minimum width you want before resizing.
Some other things to note:
Whether lineBreakMode
is respected depends on how it's set. NSLineBreakByTruncatingTail
(the default) is ignored after sizeToFit
, as are the other two truncation modes (head and middle). NSLineBreakByClipping
is also ignored. NSLineBreakByCharWrapping
works as usual. The frame width is still narrowed to fit to the rightmost letter.
Mark Amery gave a fix for NIBs and Storyboards using Auto Layout in the comments:
If your label is included in a nib or storyboard as a subview of the view
of a ViewController that uses autolayout, then putting your sizeToFit
call into viewDidLoad
won't work, because autolayout sizes and positions the subviews after viewDidLoad
is called and will immediately undo the effects of your sizeToFit
call. However, calling sizeToFit
from within viewDidLayoutSubviews
will work.
My Original Answer (for posterity/reference):
This uses the NSString
method sizeWithFont:constrainedToSize:lineBreakMode:
to calculate the frame height needed to fit a string, then sets the origin and width.
Resize the frame for the label using the text you want to insert. That way you can accommodate any number of lines.
CGSize maximumSize = CGSizeMake(300, 9999);
NSString *dateString = @"The date today is January 1st, 1999";
UIFont *dateFont = [UIFont fontWithName:@"Helvetica" size:14];
CGSize dateStringSize = [dateString sizeWithFont:dateFont
constrainedToSize:maximumSize
lineBreakMode:self.dateLabel.lineBreakMode];
CGRect dateFrame = CGRectMake(10, 10, 300, dateStringSize.height);
self.dateLabel.frame = dateFrame;
Best Answer
Modern approach
The modern way, for the entire navigation controller… do this once, when your navigation controller's root view is loaded.
However, this doesn't seem have an effect in subsequent views.
Classic approach
The old way, per view controller (these constants are for iOS 6, but if want to do it per view controller on iOS 7 appearance you'll want the same approach but with different constants):
You need to use a
UILabel
as thetitleView
of thenavigationItem
.The label should:
label.backgroundColor = [UIColor clearColor]
).label.font = [UIFont boldSystemFontOfSize: 20.0f]
).label.shadowColor = [UIColor colorWithWhite:0.0 alpha:0.5]
).label.textAlignment = NSTextAlignmentCenter
(UITextAlignmentCenter
for older SDKs).Set the label text color to be whatever custom color you'd like. You do want a color that doesn't cause the text to blend into shadow, which would be difficult to read.
I worked this out through trial and error, but the values I came up with are ultimately too simple for them not to be what Apple picked. :)
If you want to verify this, drop this code into
initWithNibName:bundle:
inPageThreeViewController.m
of Apple's NavBar sample. This will replace the text with a yellow label. This should be indistinguishable from the original produced by Apple's code, except for the color.Edit: Also, read Erik B's answer below. My code shows the effect, but his code offers a simpler way to drop this into place on an existing view controller.