I need to be able to pull the line of HTML below from my website and display the image in the imageView I have in my Storyboard. I already Have some code on how to pull text from the same website, could I use something like the other piece of code? Of course, without the striped part, that is only to get plain text. I would just load the link to the image, but the image changes depending on the song playing. I want to try and avoid just displaying the image in a UIWebView, I would much rather prefer displaying it in a UIImageView
HTML code:
<div id="album_cover">
<img height="160px" width="160px" id="imgcover" src="Link to image changed based on the song playing" alt="Loading..."></div>
Objective C code:
-(void)viewDidLoad {
self.urlForLink = #"http://cloudrad.io/pointzeroradio/player";
NSURL *myURL = [NSURL URLWithString: [self.urlForLink stringByAddingPercentEscapesUsingEncoding: NSUTF8StringEncoding]];
NSURLRequest *request = [NSURLRequest requestWithURL:myURL];
[webViewForRecents loadRequest:request];
timer = [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:0.01 target:self selector:#selector(recentTracksText) userInfo:nil repeats:YES];
}
-(void)recentTracksText {
NSString *textForBlog = [webViewForRecents stringByEvaluatingJavaScriptFromString:#"document.getElementById('current_song').textContent;"];
// Add this step for stripping the HTML from the text you received
self.strippedTextForBlog = [self stringByStrippingHTMLFromString:textForBlog];
continuousLabel.text = self.strippedTextForBlog;
}
Based off of elio.d answer. This works great for me and loads anywhere from 30 seconds to 3 minutes. If anyone has a way that will load quickly.
-(void)getImageCover {
NSString * js = #"document.getElementById('imgcover').src;";
NSString * imgLink = [webViewForRecents stringByEvaluatingJavaScriptFromString:js];
NSURL * imgURL = [NSURL URLWithString:imgLink];
dispatch_queue_t exampleQueue = dispatch_get_global_queue(DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_HIGH, 0);
dispatch_async(exampleQueue, ^{
NSData * imgData = [NSData dataWithContentsOfURL:imgURL];
UIImage * image = [UIImage imageWithData:imgData];
dispatch_queue_t queue = dispatch_get_main_queue();
dispatch_async(queue, ^{
[imageView setImage:image];
});
});
}
I suppose that your div contains just an image
If so, this is how you could implement:
-(void)getImageCover {
NSString * js = #"document.getElementById("imgcover").src;"
NSString * imgLink = [webViewForRecents stringByEvaluatingString:js];
NSURL * imgURL = [NSURL urlWithString:imgLink];
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_global_queue(DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_HIGH, 0), ^{
NSData * imgData = [NSData dataWithContentsOfURL:imgURL];
UIImage * image = [UIImage imageWithData:imageData];
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(),{
[imageView setImage:image];
});
});
}
I'm trying to send an HTML email with embedded UIImages.
This is my code:
MFMailComposeViewController *mailComposer = [[MFMailComposeViewController alloc] init];
mailComposer.mailComposeDelegate = self;
[mailComposer setSubject:NSLocalizedString(#"Subject", #"Default Subject")];
// Build email body (HTML)
UIImage *emailImage = [UIImage imageNamed:#"image.png"];
NSData *imageData = [NSData dataWithData:UIImagePNGRepresentation(emailImage)];
NSString *base64String = [imageData base64EncodedString];
NSMutableString *emailBody = [[NSMutableString alloc] initWithString:#"<HTML>Hey,<br><br>Here's the image!"];
[emailBody appendString:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"<img src='data:image/png;base64,%#'></html>",base64String]];
[mailComposer setMessageBody:emailBody isHTML:YES];
[delegate.viewController presentModalViewController:mailComposer animated:YES];
When the Email Modal View Controller comes up I see the images just fine. But when I tried to view this email on my Mac and on my iPhone and the images comes out empty.
I'm trying to reuse DTAttributedTextCell with clickable link. I could get hold of the attributedstring but I'm not sure how i can get the frame for the text such that I can create a DTLinkButton.
Here's the sample code from the Demoapp:
- (void)configureCell:(DTAttributedTextCell *)cell forIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath
{
NSDictionary *snippet = [_snippets objectAtIndex:indexPath.row];
NSString *title = [snippet objectForKey:#"Title"];
NSString *description = [snippet objectForKey:#"Description"];
NSString *html = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"<h3>%#</h3><p>%#</font>Test</p>", title, description];
[cell setHTMLString:html];
cell.attributedTextContextView.shouldDrawImages = YES;
}
Any pointers will be awesome.
The iOS app I'm writing displays an HTML page, and I would like to add a search feature where the user can search for instances of a keyword and highlight them.
What's the best way to do this?
NSString *filePath = PATH_OF_HTML_FILE;
NSError *err = nil;
NSString *pageHTML = [NSString stringWithContentsOfFile:filePath encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding error:&err];
if(err)
{
pageHTML = [NSString stringWithContentsOfFile:filePath encoding:NSASCIIStringEncoding error:&err];
}
if([searchTxtField.text length])
{
NSRange range1 = [pageHTML rangeOfString:searchTxtField.text options:NSCaseInsensitiveSearch];
if(range1.location != NSNotFound)
{
NSString *highlightedString = [pageHTML substringWithRange:range1];
pageHTML = [pageHTML stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:highlightedString withString:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"<span style=\"background-color:yellow; color:red;\">%#</span>",highlightedString] options:NSCaseInsensitiveSearch range:NSMakeRange(0, [pageHTML length]) ];
[webView loadHTMLString:pageHTML baseURL:[NSURL fileURLWithPath:filePath]];
}
}
I am having a problem with sending csv attachments via MFMailComposeViewController.
Sometimes they come through just fine, but for other users they don't come through as attachments, but rather as text inline in the email (with <br/> instead of line returns.) It's very strange. Anybody know what I'm doing wrong?
Here is a snippet of my code:
MFMailComposeViewController *mailComposeViewController = [[MFMailComposeViewController alloc] init];
mailComposeViewController.mailComposeDelegate = self;
NSString *csv = #"foo,bar,blah,hello";
NSData *csvData = [csv dataUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding];
[mailComposeViewController addAttachmentData:csvData mimeType:#"text/csv" fileName:#"testing.csv"];
[mailComposeViewController setSubject:#"testing sending csv attachment"];
[mailComposeViewController setMessageBody:#"csv file should be attached" isHTML:NO];
[self presentModalViewController:mailComposeViewController animated:YES];
-(IBAction)btnPressed:(id)sender {
NSArray *arrayPaths = NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains(NSDocumentDirectory,NSUserDomainMask,YES);
NSString *docDir = [arrayPaths objectAtIndex:0];
NSString *Path = [docDir stringByAppendingString:#"/CSVFile.csv"];
NSData *csvData = [NSData dataWithContentsOfFile:Path];
MFMailComposeViewController *controller = [[MFMailComposeViewController alloc] init];
controller.mailComposeDelegate = self;
[controller setSubject:#"For csv file..."];
[controller setMessageBody:#"...csv file is hear.." isHTML:NO];
[controller addAttachmentData:csvData mimeType:#"text/csv" fileName:#"CSVFile.csv"];
[self presentModalViewController:controller animated:YES];
[controller release];
}
Hi I put sample code for Creating CSV file and attach it with mail but make sure you have to add MessageUI.Framework and import its related header "MessageUI/MessageUI.h"
"MessageUI/MFMailComposeViewController.h" and deligate "MFMailComposeViewControllerDelegate"...I hope this wl useful for others
- (void)viewDidLoad {
arrCsv=[[NSArray alloc]initWithObjects:#"Hello",#"Hi",#"traun",#"fine",nil];
NSArray *paths = NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains
(NSDocumentDirectory, NSUserDomainMask, YES);
NSString *documentsDirectory = [paths objectAtIndex:0];
NSString *fileName = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#/try.csv", documentsDirectory];
[[arrCsv componentsJoinedByString:#","] writeToFile:fileName atomically:YES encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding error:NULL];
}
-(ibAction)btnMail {
NSArray *arrayPaths = NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains(NSDocumentDirectory,NSUserDomainMask,YES);
NSString *docDir = [arrayPaths objectAtIndex:0];
NSString *Path = [docDir stringByAppendingString:#"/CSVFile.csv"];
NSData *csvData = [NSData dataWithContentsOfFile:Path];
MFMailComposeViewController *controller = [[MFMailComposeViewController alloc] init];
controller.mailComposeDelegate = self;
[controller setSubject:#"For csv file..."];
[controller setMessageBody:#"...csv file is hear.." isHTML:NO];
[controller addAttachmentData:csvData mimeType:#"text/csv" fileName:#"CSVFile.csv"];
[self presentModalViewController:controller animated:YES];
[controller release];
}
- (void)mailComposeController:(MFMailComposeViewController*)controller didFinishWithResult:(MFMailComposeResult)result error:(NSError*)error
{ message.hidden = NO;
switch (result)
{
case MFMailComposeResultCancelled:
message.text = #"Result: canceled";
break;
case MFMailComposeResultSaved:
message.text = #"Result: saved";
break;
case MFMailComposeResultSent:
message.text = #"Result: sent";
break;
case MFMailComposeResultFailed:
message.text = #"Result: failed";
break;
default:
message.text = #"Result: not sent";
break;
}
[self dismissModalViewControllerAnimated:YES];
}
set the mime type as "application/octet-stream" and that should do the trick to remove inline attachments (I still named the extension of my file i.e. pdf)
I believe the second parameter to setMessageBody:isHTML: must be YES for attachments to not show up inline.
Even if you set isHTML param to YES, your message body can be sent as plain/text if the message body can be represented as such. And attachments in plain/text messages are not always recognized correctly by some email clients (Outlook).
In my case adding a link in the message body helped. Formatting text as bold with HTML tags works too. Tricky!
Tested on iPod 1G 3.1.3.
This may not be the case here, but one thing to watch out for is that:
[NSString dataUsingEncoding:]
returns a valid but empty NSData object if the conversion to the specified encoding is not possible. Better to use the full version:
[NSString dataUsingEncoding: s allowLossyConversion: YES]
Or check the length of the returned data. It appears that zero-length data attachments are trimmed somewhere in the mail process.