I have developed the app having 2 language(English & Arabic). I have given screen when you can switch the language when you switch language you will need to restart the app and work proper.
But the problem is no i wants to display default language as arabic. I have set "Localization native development region (CFBundleDevelopmentRegion)" as "ar" its not works properly display weired somehow.
I event try to set AppleLanguages in NSUSerDefault but its not display my storyboard as arabic.
Thanks in Advance!
If you want to make a multilingual button on a native iPhone app, where it can be one language by default, but based on your settings, show different text on the same button, how would you go about it?
Is it also possible to style (e.g. with text-shadows and custom fonts) the text on the button?
I'm not an iOS developer, but I'm attempting to provide designs for an iOS developer and don't understand the limitations (yet) when going from CSS3 to iOS UI elements.
So far, iOS development appears to be like creating image-maps where none of the CSS logic is applicable from web development and almost all UI elements appear to need all states as flattened images. I thought the controls were more dynamic but haven't found the right terminology for results from google to be very forthcoming on the topic.
U can use NSLocalizedString for multilingual text on button.
Configuring Button Title
titleLabel property
reversesTitleShadowWhenHighlighted property
– setTitle:forState:
– setTitleColor:forState:
– setTitleShadowColor:forState:
– titleColorForState:
– titleForState:
– titleShadowColorForState:
Also set Custom font like this:
yourButton.titleLabel.font = [UIFont fontWithName:#"Courier" size:22.0];
if u want to add gradient to button then u will have to use CALayer like this:
yourButton.layer = //any modification in button's layer here
For more refer UIButton class reference
How can I make UIBarbuttonItem localizable?
My implementation:
UIBarButtonItem *cancelButton = [[UIBarButtonItem alloc]
initWithBarButtonSystemItem:UIBarButtonSystemItemDone
target:self
action:#selector(cancel)];
Originally I thought that it is automatic, because it looks easy to make it like this, but looks like not.
EDIT1: Official Apple dox says that cancel, done, edit, save buttons are localized, but not sure how to make it.
Alright, I think I know what's going on.
UIKit decides in which language to display strings, based on the value of [[NSBundle mainBundle] preferredLocalizations]. The idea behind this is to use translated resources whenever possible, falling back to English otherwise. For example, if you don't provide the translation of your app in Finnish and Finnish is selected in Settings->General->International->Language, your app will be in English. It may be a bit more complicated (UIKit may go through all the list of languages in the order displayed in Settings.app, trying to find the first language your app has translations for), but the point stands.
The above may be too obvious to miss a crucial nuance. The language determined by the above algorithm is used for the app's whole UI. For example, if the app bundle doesn't contain sk.lproj, nothing will be displayed in Slovak. In fact, it does make sense because otherwise some parts of UI would be in Slovak, other parts, in English.
Open the compiled app's bundle to see which *.lproj folders are there. The same set, sorted according to user preferences, will be returned by [[NSBundle mainBundle] preferredLocalizations]. All localizable strings, including system bar button items, will be displayed in one of those languages. If you don't support, for example, Russian, the whole UI will appear in another language, even if Russian is selected in Settings.app.
If this is the case with your app indeed, there are two right things and one wrong thing to do:
right: provide Slovak translation for each and every string displayed in your app, translate any text-containing nibs to Slovak too;
right: ignore Slovak altogether if you cannot (or don't need to) support it;
wrong: select any strings file or any nib, open Xcode's inspector, click "Add Localization…" (if the button is disabled, first click "Make File Localizable"), type "sk", click "Add" and build the project. This will make UIKit think your app is translated to Slovak, and system bar button items will automatically appear in Slovak when it's selected in Settings.app.
If you see a different behavior, there may be something wrong with the project/build/built app. For example, I noticed that when you make a file localized, its non-localized copy doesn't get deleted from the previously built app bundle.
Bump, but I think Vanya’s problem might be the “Localization native development region”/CFBundleDevelopmentRegion entry in Info.plist. If this is set to English and no localizations are explicitly made available as Costique explains, all system strings will be non-localized. But, set it to sk and - violà.
Not sure I understand your question correctly, but standard (system) bar button items are localized and thus automatically appear in the user-selected language. There are notable exceptions like UISwitch showing 0/1 instead of ON/OFF. What language are you having problems with?
That said, you can always use custom bar button items in place of system ones and provide necessary translations yourself. It's just overkill in most cases.
My implementation in Swift:
let doneButton = UIBarButtonItem(barButtonSystemItem: .done, target: self, action: #selector(doneButtonTapped(button:)))
This uses the system default language for "Done" text.
Is there a way of showing the character count in the MFMessageComposeViewController? I have turned it ON in the iPhone settings for the native sms app but in my app it does not show it.
From MFMessageComposeViewController Class Reference :
Important: The message composition interface itself is not customizable and must not be modified by your application.
It's seem that you cannot change anything to this class.
Maybe there is a way to know if the option is enabled on the iPhone and, in this case, you'll put this key in NSUserDefaults but it will be surprising.
In my app I use the ABPeoplePickerNavigationController to present an address book to the user so they can select a contact from their contacts.
I want my app to support multiple localizations (English, French) and I was expecting the ABPeoplePickerNavigationController to display the correct localised strings when I changed the phone's locale. However, this does not happen - no matter what language I change the iPhone to, the ABPeoplePickerNavigationController always displays English strings. This is strange as the Contacts application on the iPhone does change its text depending on the locale.
Does anyone know how to instruct the ABPeoplePickerNavigationController to display the correct text for the current locale?
Is your app already localized or are you just planning to add localization later? AFAIK, the built-in controls only display localized texts in those languages that your app supports.
fileName : InfoPlist.strings
view -> Utilities -> show file inspector
-> Localization "+" button click >> add language