Mirko
Mirko

Reputation: 2466

Programmatically Select all text in UITextField

How can I programmatically select all text in UITextField?

Upvotes: 83

Views: 62432

Answers (12)

Ted
Ted

Reputation: 23746

Use what you need

ObjC

[yourtextField becomeFirstResponder]; //puts cursor on text field
[yourtextField selectAll:nil];  //highlights text
[yourtextField selectAll:self]; //highlights text and shows menu(cut copy paste)

Swift

yourTextField.becomeFirstResponder() //puts cursor on text field
yourTextField.selectAll(nil)  //highlights text
yourTextField.selectAll(self) //highlights text and shows menu(cut copy paste)

Upvotes: 54

Suragch
Suragch

Reputation: 511626

Swift

Select all text in a UITextField:

textField.selectedTextRange = textField.textRange(from: textField.beginningOfDocument, to: textField.endOfDocument)

My full answer is here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/34922332/3681880

Upvotes: 9

Jase68
Jase68

Reputation: 286

This is the best solution I've found. No sharedMenuController, and it works consecutively:

-(void)textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
{
    [textField performSelector:@selector(selectAll:) withObject:nil afterDelay:0.1];
}

Upvotes: 13

blackforestcowboy
blackforestcowboy

Reputation: 1021

Thats what did the trick for me:

[self.titleField setSelectedTextRange:[self.titleField textRangeFromPosition:self.titleField.beginningOfDocument toPosition:self.titleField.endOfDocument]];

Pretty ugly but it works, so there will be no sharedMenuController shown!

To fix the "only works every second time" problem use following:

__weak typeof(self) weakSelf = self;
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
    __strong __typeof(weakSelf) strongSelf = weakSelf;
    UITextRange *range = [strongSelf textRangeFromPosition:strongSelf.beginningOfDocument toPosition:strongSelf.endOfDocument];
    [strongSelf setSelectedTextRange:range];
});

Thanks to Eric Baker ( just edited from comment in here )

Upvotes: 88

ennuikiller
ennuikiller

Reputation: 46965

If you mean how would you allow the user to edit the text in a uitextfield then just assign firstResponder to it:

[textField becomeFirstResponder]

If you mean how do you get the text in the uitextfield than this will do it:

textField.text

If you mean actually select the text (as in highlight it) then this will may be useful:

selectAll

Upvotes: -2

John Scalo
John Scalo

Reputation: 3401

Swift 3:

textField.selectAll(self)

Upvotes: 2

Jason Daniels
Jason Daniels

Reputation: 39

To be able to select text, the text field has to be editable. To know when the text field is editable use the delegate methods:

- (void)textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField
- (BOOL)textFieldShouldBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField

I don't think textFieldShouldBeginEditing: is required but it's what I used in my implementation.

- (void)textFieldDidBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField{
    [textField selectAll:textField];
}

- (BOOL)textFieldShouldBeginEditing:(UITextField *)textField{
    return YES;
}

Passing in nil to selectAll: won't show the Menu.

Upvotes: 3

nahung89
nahung89

Reputation: 8085

I create a custom alert view which contains a UITextField inside. I found a problem to the textfield is that: beginningOfDocument only has value if textfield is added to screen & becomeFirstResponder is called.

Otherwise beginningOfDocument returns nil and [UITextField textRangeFromPosition:] can not get the value.

So here is my sample code to solve this case.

UIWindow *window = [[[UIApplication sharedApplication] windows] firstObject];
[window addSubview:theAlertView]; // textfield must be added as a subview of screen first
UITextField *textField = theAlertView.textField;
[textField becomeFirstResponder]; // then call to show keyboard and cursor 
UITextRange *range = [textField textRangeFromPosition:textField.beginningOfDocument toPosition:textField.endOfDocument]; // at this time, we could get beginningOfDocument
[textField setSelectedTextRange:range]; // Finally, it works!!!

Upvotes: 1

Rick
Rick

Reputation: 3857

Turns out, calling -selectAll: with a non-nil sender displays the menu. Calling it with nil causes it to select the text, but not display the menu.

I tried this after my bug report about it came back from Apple with the suggestion that I pass nil instead of self.

No need to muck with UIMenuController or other selection APIs.

Upvotes: 66

Sound Blaster
Sound Blaster

Reputation: 4919

UITextField *tf = yourTF;
// hide cursor (you have store default color!!!)
[[tf valueForKey:@"textInputTraits"] setValue:[UIColor clearColor]
                                       forKey:@"insertionPointColor"];
// enable selection
[tf selectAll:self];
// insert your string here
// and select nothing (!!!)
[tf setMarkedText:@"Egor"
    selectedRange:NSMakeRange(0, 0)];

Done!

Upvotes: 0

Dan J
Dan J

Reputation: 25673

Unfortunately I don't think you can do that.

I'm not sure if this helps you, but setClearsOnBeginEditing lets you specify that the UITextField should delete the existing value when the user starts editing (this is the default for secure UITextFields).

Upvotes: 2

Justin Searls
Justin Searls

Reputation: 4866

I just tested this to verify Mirko's comment above, but my test verifies that selectAll: does in fact select all the text when it's sent to the UITextField itself.

Note that the text will be immediately obscured with CUT | COPY | PASTE actions, but to your question, it is exactly what appears when a user taps "Select All" to begin with.

The solution I'm going with follows, note that the second line will temporarily hide the CUT/COPY/PASTE dialog, without disabling it for explicit user selections

[_myTextField selectAll:self];
[UIMenuController sharedMenuController].menuVisible = NO;

Upvotes: 50

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