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Utility that lets you define UIColors in Swift as they've meant to be defined: as HEX values

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artman/HexColor

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HexColor

Build Status CocoaPods Compatible Carthage Compatible License Platform Twitter

HexColor is a simple extension that lets you initialize UIColors the way they were meant to be initialized: With hex integer values.

Requirements

  • iOS 7.0 / watchOS 2.0 / tvOS 10.0
  • Xcode 9.0 (Swift 4.0)

Installation

To use HexColor with a project targeting iOS 7, simply copy HexColor.swift into your project.

CocoaPods

To integrate HexColor into your project add the following to your Podfile:

platform :ios, '8.0'
use_frameworks!

pod 'HxColor', '~> 4.0'

Carthage

To integrate Signals into your project using Carthage add the following to your Cartfile:

github "artman/HexColor" ~> 4.0

Quick start

myLabel.textColor = UIColor(0xFFFFFF) // Let there be white
myView.backgroundColor = UIColor(0x0f126f) // Deep blue

// Yay, finally you can stop to use this crap:
// UIColor.colorWithRed(0x0f/255.0, green: 0x12/255.0, blue: 0x65/255.0, 1.0)

Need colors with alpha? No worries:

myLabel.textColor = UIColor(0xFF0000).alpha(0.5) // Red with 50% opacity
myLabel.textColor = UIColor(0xFF0000, alpha: 0.5) // Another way to do this

You can also mix two colors together easily:

myLabel.textColor = UIColor(0x3377FF).mix(with: 0xFF2222, amount: 0.25)

Contribute

To contribute, just fork, branch & send a pull request. To get in touch, hit me up on Twitter @artman

License

HexColor is released under an MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more information

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Utility that lets you define UIColors in Swift as they've meant to be defined: as HEX values

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