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We have extended UILabel to be able to apply standard fonts and colors for all uses of a given label type in our apps. Eg.

@interface UILabelHeadingBold : UILabel
@end

In our AppDelegate, we apply fonts and colors like this

[[UILabelHeadingBold appearance] setTextColor:<some color>];
[[UILabelHeadingBold appearance] setFont:<some font>];

When adding a UILabel in our XIB's, we can now select the class to be of type UILabelHeadingBold, and it works as expected. The label is shown with the correct font and color, as specified in our AppDelegate.

However, if we create a label programatically, eg.

UILabelHeadingBold *headingLabel = [[UILabelHeadingBold alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(10, 10, 100, 30)];
[self.mainView addSubview:headingLabel];

the UILabel does not get the expected font/color applied. We have to manually apply these attributes.

Is there a way to make UIAppearance take effect on programatically created UI elements, or does it only work when used within XIB's?

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2 Answers

From Apple documentation :

To support appearance customization, a class must conform to the UIAppearanceContainer protocol and relevant accessor methods must be marked with UI_APPEARANCE_SELECTOR.

For example in UINavigationBar.h, tintColor is marked with UI_APPEARANCE_SELECTOR

@property(nonatomic,retain) UIColor *tintColor UI_APPEARANCE_SELECTOR;

But in UILabel.h you can see that the textColor and font propertys are not marked with UI_APPEARANCE_SELECTOR but somehow it works when added in Interface Builder (following the documentation it shouldn't work at all).

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It does sometimes work for UILabels created in code too, but results are inconsistent, and behaviour is different between iOS 5 and, well, you know. So just don't use UIAppearance to customize UILabels – Joshua J. McKinnon Aug 7 '12 at 12:01

Simple hack that is working for me with no issues is to create a category with a UIAppearance setter that modifies UILabel properties.

Following UIAppearance conventions I created a method:

- (void)setTextAttributes:(NSDictionary *)numberTextAttributes;
{
    UIFont *font = [numberTextAttributes objectForKey:UITextAttributeFont];
    if (font) {
        self.font = font;
    }
    UIColor *textColor = [numberTextAttributes objectForKey:UITextAttributeTextColor];
    if (textColor) {
        self.textColor = textColor;
    }
    UIColor *textShadowColor = [numberTextAttributes objectForKey:UITextAttributeTextShadowColor];
    if (textShadowColor) {
        self.shadowColor = textShadowColor;
    }
    NSValue *shadowOffsetValue = [numberTextAttributes objectForKey:UITextAttributeTextShadowOffset];
    if (shadowOffsetValue) {
        UIOffset shadowOffset = [shadowOffsetValue UIOffsetValue];
        self.shadowOffset = CGSizeMake(shadowOffset.horizontal, shadowOffset.vertical);
    }
}

In UILabel category:

@interface UILabel (UISS)

- (void)setTextAttributes:(NSDictionary *)numberTextAttributes UI_APPEARANCE_SELECTOR;

@end

I'm still trying to figure out why the original setter does not work.

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We create custom properties in a subclass that work with the appearance proxy. E.g. a "titleLabelFont" property to wrap UIButton's titleLabel.font property. It works for other properties too, such as shadows. – Dan Reese Jan 15 at 17:44

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