Home

Awesome

TypographyKit TypographyKit

Build Status Version Carthage compatible License Platform Twitter Swift 5.0 Reviewed by Hound

TypographyKit makes it easy to define typography styles and colour palettes in your iOS app helping you achieve visual consistency in your design as well as supporting Dynamic Type even when using custom fonts. [Summary] [Detailed]

To learn more about how to use TypographyKit, take a look at the table of contents below:

Features

What's new in TypographyKit 5.0.0?

TypographyKit.configure(
    with: TypographyKitConfiguration.default
        .setConfigurationURL(configurationURL)
)

Alternatively, an async version of this method exists for developers supporting iOS 13 and above:

await TypographyKit.configure(with:
    TypographyKitConfiguration.default.setConfigurationURL(configurationURL)
)

For a detailed list of changes, see CHANGELOG.md.

Installation

Cocoapods

CocoaPods is a dependency manager which integrates dependencies into your Xcode workspace. To install it using RubyGems run:

gem install cocoapods

To install TypographyKit using Cocoapods, simply add the following line to your Podfile:

pod "TypographyKit"

Then run the command:

pod install

For more information see here.

Carthage

Carthage is a dependency manager which produces a binary for manual integration into your project. It can be installed via Homebrew using the commands:

brew update
brew install carthage

In order to integrate TypographyKit into your project via Carthage, add the following line to your project's Cartfile:

github "rwbutler/TypographyKit"

From the macOS Terminal run carthage update --platform iOS to build the framework then drag TypographyKit.framework into your Xcode project.

For more information see here.

Usage

Example App

An example app exists in the Example directory to provide some pointers on getting started.

Configuration

Include a TypographyKit.json (example) or TypographyKit.plist (example) as part of your app project in which you define your colors and typography styles:

{
    "typography-colors": {
        "background": {
            "dark": "dark royal-blue",
            "light": "lightest gray"
        },
        "gold": "#FFAB01",
        "royal-blue": "#08224C"
    },
    "typography-kit": {
        "labels": {
            "line-break": "word-wrap"
        },
        "minimum-point-size": 10,
        "maximum-point-size": 100,
        "point-step-size": 2,
        "point-step-multiplier": 1,
        "scaling-mode": "uifontmetrics-with-fallback"
    },
    "ui-font-text-styles": {
            "heading": {
            "font-name": "Avenir-Medium",
            "point-size": 36,
            "text-color": "text",
            "letter-case": "regular"
        }
    }
}

Swift UI

Colors

Typography (Fonts)

Define additional UIFont.TextStyles within your app matching those defined in your .plist:

extension UIFont.TextStyle
{
    static let heading = UIFont.TextStyle(rawValue: "heading")
}

Where you would usually set the text on a UILabel e.g.

self.titleLabel.text = "My label text"

Use TypographyKit's UIKit additions:

self.titleLabel.text("My label text", style: .heading)

Or where your text has been set through IB simply set the UIFont.TextStyle programmatically:

self.titleLabel.fontTextStyle = .heading

If you are happy to use strings, an alternative means of setting the fontTextStyle property is to set the key path fontTextStyleName on your UIKit element to the string value representing your fontTextStyle - in the example above, this would be 'heading'.

Setting the fontTextStyleName key path in Interface Builder

Using this method it is possible to support Dynamic Type in your application with zero code.

Your UILabel and UIButton elements will automatically respond to changes in the Dynamic Type setting on iOS on setting a UIFont.TextStyle with no further work needed.

Typography Styles

Typography styles you define in TypographyKit.plist can optionally include a text color and a letter case.

	<key>ui-font-text-styles</key>
	<dict>
		<key>heading</key>
		<dict>
			<key>font-name</key>
			<string>Avenir-Medium</string>
			<key>point-size</key>
			<integer>36</integer>
			<key>text-color</key>
			<string>#2C0E8C</string>
			<key>letter-case</key>
			<string>upper</string>
		</dict>
	</dict>

Extending Styles

From version 1.1.3 onwards it is possible to use an existing typography style to create a new one. For example, imagine you would like to create a new style based on an existing one but changing the text color. We can use the extends keyword to extend a style that exists already and then specify which properties of the that style to override e.g. the text-color property.

We can create a new typography style called interactive-text based on a style we have defined already called paragraph as follows:

PLIST

<key>paragraph</key>
<dict>
	<key>font-name</key>
	<string>Avenir-Medium</string>
	<key>point-size</key>
	<integer>16</integer>
	<key>text-color</key>
	<string>text</string>
	<key>letter-case</key>
	<string>regular</string>
</dict>
<key>interactive-text</key>
<dict>
	<key>extends</key>
	<string>paragraph</string>
	<key>text-color</key>
	<string>purple</string>
</dict>

JSON

"paragraph": {
	"font-name": "Avenir-Medium",
	"point-size": 16,
	"text-color": "text",
	"letter-case": "regular"
},
"interactive-text": {
	"extends": "paragraph",
	"text-color": "purple"
}        

Color Palettes

Android has from the start provided developers with the means to define a color palette for an app in the form of the colors.xml file. Colors.xml also allows developers to define colors by their hex values. TypographyKit allows developers to define a color palette for an app by creating an entry in the TypographyKit.plist.

    <key>typography-colors</key>
    <dict>
        <key>blueGem</key>
        <string>#2C0E8C</string>
    </dict>

Colors can be defined using hex values, RGB values or simple colors by using their names e.g. 'blue'.

	<key>typography-colors</key>
    <dict>
        <key>blueGem</key>
        <string>rgb(44, 14, 140)</string>
    </dict>

Create a UIColor extension to use the newly-defined colors throughout your app:

extension UIColor {
    static let blueGem: UIColor = TypographyKit.colors["blueGem"]!
}

Or:

extension UIColor {
	static let fallback: UIColor = .black
	static let blueGem: UIColor = TypographyKit.colors["blueGem"] ?? fallback
}

Your named colors can be used when defining your typography styles in TypographyKit.plist.

 	<key>ui-font-text-styles</key>
	<dict>
		<key>heading</key>
		<dict>
			<key>font-name</key>
			<string>Avenir-Medium</string>
			<key>point-size</key>
			<integer>36</integer>
			<key>text-color</key>
			<string>blueGem</string>
		</dict>
	</dict>

It is also possible override the text color of a typography style on a case-by-case basis:

myLabel.text("hello world", style: .heading, textColor: .blue)

UIColor(named:)

TypographyKit supports definition of colors via asset catalogs. Simply include the name of the color as part of your style in the configuration file and if the color is found in your asset catalog it will automatically be applied.

Letter Casing

Useful String additions are provided to easily convert letter case.

let pangram = "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"
let upperCamelCased = pangram.letterCase(.upperCamel)
print(upperCamelCased)
// prints TheQuickBrownFoxJumpsOverTheLazyDog

With numerous convenience functions:

let upperCamelCased = pangram.upperCamelCased()
// prints TheQuickBrownFoxJumpsOverTheLazyDog

let kebabCased = pangram.kebabCased()
// prints the-quick-brown-fox-jumps-over-the-lazy-dog

Typography styles can be assigned a default letter casing.

	<key>ui-font-text-styles</key>
	<dict>
		<key>heading</key>
		<dict>
			<key>font-name</key>
			<string>Avenir-Medium</string>
			<key>point-size</key>
			<integer>36</integer>
			<key>letter-case</key>
			<string>upper</string>
		</dict>
	</dict>

However occasionally, you may need to override the default letter casing of a typography style:

myLabel.text("hello world", style: .heading, letterCase: .capitalized)

Dynamic Type Configuration

By default, your font point size will increase by 2 points for each notch on the Larger Text slider in the iOS accessibility settings however you may optionally specify how your UIKit elements react to changes in UIContentSizeCategory.

You may specify your own point step size and multiplier by inclusion of a dictionary with key typography-kit as part of your TypographyKit.json (or TypographyKit.plist if preferred) file.

<key>typography-kit</key>
<dict>
    <key>minimum-point-size</key>
    <integer>10</integer>
    <key>maximum-point-size</key>
    <integer>100</integer>
    <key>point-step-size</key>
    <integer>2</integer>
    <key>point-step-multiplier</key>
    <integer>1</integer>
</dict>

Optionally, you may clamp the font point size to a lower and / or upper bound using the minimum-point-size and maximum-point-size properties.

Remote Configuration

TypographyKit also allows you to host your configuration remotely so that your colors and font styles can be updated dynamically. To do so, simply add the following line to your app delegate so that it is invoked when your app finishes launching:

TypographyKit.configurationURL = URL(string: "https://github.com/rwbutler/TypographyKit/blob/main/Example/TypographyKit/TypographyKit.plist")

Your typography styles and colors will be updated the next time your app is launched. However, should you need your styles to be updated sooner you may call TypographyKit.refresh().

Author

Ross Butler

License

TypographyKit is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.

Additional Software

Controls

AnimatedGradientView
AnimatedGradientView

Frameworks

CheatsConnectivityFeatureFlagsSkylarkTypographyKitUpdates
CheatsConnectivityFeatureFlagsSkylarkTypographyKitUpdates

Tools

Config ValidatorIPA UploaderPalette
Config ValidatorIPA UploaderPalette