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    star
    288
  • Rank 143,818 (Top 3 %)
  • Language
    Swift
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created over 7 years ago
  • Updated about 4 years ago

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Repository Details

An easy way to create and layout UI components for iOS (Swift version).

cupcake

Swift4 Swift5 Platform Version License

Introduction

Cupcake is a framework that allow you to easily create and layout UI components for iOS 8.0+. It use chaining syntax and provides some frequent used functionalities that are missing in UIKit.


Easy way to create UIFont, UIImage and UIColor objects

You can create UIFont object with Font() function.

Font(15)                    //UIFont.systemFontOfSize(15)
Font("15")                  //UIFont.boldSystemFontOfSize(15)
Font("body")                //UIFontTextStyle.body
Font("Helvetica,15")        //helvetica with size of 15

You can create UIImage object with Img() function.

Img("imageName")            //image with name
Img("#imageName")           //prefixed with # will return a stretchable image
Img("$imageName")           //prefixed with $ will return a template image
Img("red")                  //1x1 size image with red color

You can create UIColor object with Color() function.

Color("red")                //UIColor.red
Color("0,0,255")            //RGB color
Color("#0000FF")            //Hex color
Color("random")             //random color

Color("red,0.5")            //even with alpha
Color("0,0,255,0.8")
Color("#0000FF,0.5")
Color("random,0.2")

Color(Img("pattern"))       //or image

Easy way to create NSAttributedString objects and String manipulations

You can create NSAttributedString object with AttStr() function.

AttStr("hello").color("red")                        //red color string
AttStr("hello, 101").select("[0-9]+").underline     //101 with underline
AttStr("A smile ", Img("smile"), " !!")             //insert image attachment

String manipulations:

Str(1024)                                           //convert anything to string
Str("1 + 1 = %d", 2)                                //formatted string

"hello world".subFrom(2).subTo("ld")                //"llo wor"
"hello world".subAt(1..<4)                          //"ell"
"hello 12345".subMatch("\\d+")                      //"12345"

4 basic UI components

You can create UIView, UILabel, UIImageView and UIButton objects simply by using View, Label, ImageView and Button variables.

View.bg("red").border(1).radius(4).shadow(0.7, 2)

Label.str("hello\ncupcake").font(30).color("#FB3A9F").lines(2).align(.center)

ImageView.img("cat").mode(.scaleAspectFit)

Button.str("kitty").font("20").color("#CFC8AC").highColor("darkGray").onClick({ _ in
    print("click")
}).img("cat").padding(10).border(1, "#CFC8AC")

As you can see, .font(), .img() and .color() can take the same parameters as Font(), Img() and Color(). Also you can pass String, NSAttributedString or any other values to .str().

Enhancements

You can add click handler and adjust click area to any view.
To round a view with half height no matter what size it is, simply use .radius(-1).

ImageView.img("mario").radius(-1).touchInsets(-40).onClick({ _ in
    print("extending touch area")
})

You can add line spacing and link handling to UILabel.

let str = "Lorem ipsum 20 dolor sit er elit lamet, consectetaur cillium #adipisicing pecu, sed do #eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et 3.14 dolore magna aliqua."
let attStr = AttStr(str).select("elit", .number, .hashTag, .range(-7, 6)).link()

Label.str(attStr).lineGap(10).lines().onLink({ text in
    print(text)
})

.bg() allow you to set background for any view with color or image.
.highBg() allow you to set highlighted background for UIButton (which is very useful).
Also you can add spacing to title and image within button or even exchange their position.

Button.str("More").img("arrow").color("black").bg("lightGray,0.3").highBg("lightGray").gap(5).reversed()

You can add placeholder and limit text input to UITextField and UITextView.

TextField.hint("placeholder").maxLength(10).padding(0, 10).keyboard(.numberPad)

TextView.hint("placeholder").maxLength(140).padding(10).onChange({ textView in
    print(textView.text)
})

Easy way to Setup Constraints

You use .pin() to setup simple constraints relative to self or superview.

.pin(200)                       //height constriant
.pin(100, 200)                  //width and height constraints			
.pin(.xy(50, 50))               //left and top constraints relative to superview
.pin(.maxXY(50, 50))            //right and bottom constraints relative to superview
.pin(.center)                   //center equals to superview
 ...
.pin(.lowHugging)               //low content hugging priority, useful when embed in StackView
.pin(.lowRegistance)            //low content compression resistance priority, useful when embed in StackView

You use .makeCons() and .remakeCons() to setup any constraints just like SnapKit.

.makeCons({
    $0.left.top.equal(50, 50)
    $0.size.equal(view2).multiply(0.5, 0.7)
})

.remakeCons({ make in
    make.origin.equal(view2).offset(10, 20)
    make.width.equal(100)
    make.height.equal(view2).multiply(2)
})

You use .embedIn() to embed inside superview with edge constriants.

.embedIn(superview)                     //top: 0,  left: 0,  bottom: 0,  right: 0
.embedIn(superview, 10)                 //top: 10, left: 10, bottom: 10, right: 10
.embedIn(superview, 10, 20)             //top: 10, left: 20, bottom: 10, right: 20
.embedIn(superview, 10, 20, 30)         //top: 10, left: 20, right: 30
.embedIn(superview, 10, 20, 30, 40)     //top: 10, left: 20, bottom: 30, right: 40
.embedIn(superview, 10, 20, nil)        //top: 10, left: 20

Easy way to Layout

Setup constraints for every views manually could be tedious. Luckily, you can build most of the layouts by simply using HStack() and VStack() (which are similar to UIStackView) and hopefully without creating any explicit constirants.

indexLabel = Label.font(17).color("darkGray").align(.center).pin(.w(44))
iconView = ImageView.pin(64, 64).radius(10).border(1.0 / UIScreen.main.scale, "#CCC")
    
titleLabel = Label.font(15).lines(2)
categoryLabel = Label.font(13).color("darkGray")
    
ratingLabel = Label.font(11).color("orange")
countLabel = Label.font(11).color("darkGray")
    
actionButton = Button.font("15").color("#0065F7").border(1, "#0065F7").radius(3)
actionButton.highColor("white").highBg("#0065F7").padding(5, 10)
    
iapLabel = Label.font(9).color("darkGray").lines(2).str("In-App\nPurchases").align(.center)
    
let ratingStack = HStack(ratingLabel, countLabel).gap(5)
let midStack = VStack(titleLabel, categoryLabel, ratingStack).gap(4)
let actionStack = VStack(actionButton, iapLabel).gap(4).align(.center)
    
HStack(indexLabel, iconView, 10, midStack, "<-->", 10, actionStack).embedIn(self.contentView, 10, 0, 10, 15)

appStore

Lightweight Style

Some of the chainable properties can be set as style.

//local style
let style1 = Styles.color("darkGray").font(15)
Label.styles(style1).str("hello world")

//global style
Styles("style2").bg("red").padding(10).border(3, "#FC6560").radius(-1)
Button.styles(style1, "style2").str("hello world")

//copy style from view
let style3 = Styles(someButton)
Button.styles(someButton).str("hello world")

Others

You can create static tableView with PlainTable() or GroupTable() functions.

let titles = ["Basic", "Enhancement", "Stack", "StaticTable", "Examples"]
PlainTable(titles).onClick({ row in
    print(row.indexPath)
})

You can present Alert And ActionSheet using the chaining syntax as well.

Alert.title("Alert").message("message go here").action("OK").show()

ActionSheet.title("ActionSheet").message("message go here").action("Action1", {
    print("Action1")
}).action("Action2", {
    print("Action2")
}).cancel("Cancel").show()

Installation

Cocoapods

Cupcake can be added to your project using CocoaPods by adding the following line to your Podfile:

pod "Cupcake"

Carthage

If you're using Carthage you can add a dependency on Cupcake by adding it to your Cartfile:

github "nerdycat/Cupcake"