I would like a different background color when the user selects a tab bar item than when it is unselected.
Put this in the Appdelegate.m
in application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions
UIImage *whiteBackground = [UIImage imageNamed:@"whiteBackground"];
[[UITabBar appearance] setSelectionIndicatorImage:whiteBackground];
if you use a storyboard or xibs, click "Tab Bar" and add "selectedImageTintColor" path into the Key Path Attributes tag. Like this :
UPDATE: As of iOS 7.1 this technique no longer works (if the user taps the same tab twice in succession, the background colour is cleared).
UITabBarItem
is a subclass of UIBarItem
, everything is more painful because UIBarItem doesn't subclass UIView
; however, UITabBarItem
contains one. What follows manipulates that view, and therefore might be rejected if submitted to the AppStore.
1) Subclass UITabBarItem
Create a subclass of UITabBarItem and add a new selected
property to its header, like so:
@interface ALDTabBarItem : UITabBarItem
@property (nonatomic, assign, getter = isSelected) BOOL selected;
@end
UITabBarItems have a view property, but it isn't exposed. We can extend the class to access it, and then create a custom setter on the selected
property to change the background colour, like so:
#import "ALDTabBarItem.h"
@interface ALDTabBarItem (ALD)
@property (nonatomic, strong) UIView *view;
@end
@implementation ALDTabBarItem
- (void)setSelected:(BOOL)selected
{
if(selected)
self.view.backgroundColor = [UIColor redColor];
else
self.view.backgroundColor = [UIColor clearColor];
}
@end
2) Update your UITabBarController delegate
Add the following code to the delegate of your UITabBarController, which sets the selected states of the UITabBar:
- (void)tabBar:(UITabBar *)tabBar didSelectItem:(UITabBarItem *)item
{
for(ALDTabBarItem *myItem in tabBar.items)
myItem.selected = (myItem == item);
}
In Swift
UITabBar.appearance().selectionIndicatorImage = UIImage(named: "tabSelected")
with an image tabSelected@2x.png
of size 98x98 pixels
Follow this Steps:
Create SubClass of
UITabBarController
Go to
viewDidAppear
ofUITabBarController
subclassNow Find the size of TabBarItem,
UITabBar *tabBar = self.tabBar; CGSize imgSize = CGSizeMake(tabBar.frame.size.width/tabBar.items.count,tabBar.frame.size.height);
Now Create the image with that size,
//Create Image UIGraphicsBeginImageContextWithOptions(imgSize, NO, 0); UIBezierPath* p = [UIBezierPath bezierPathWithRect:CGRectMake(0,0,imgSize.width,imgSize.height)]; [[UIColor blueColor] setFill]; [p fill]; UIImage* finalImg = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext(); UIGraphicsEndImageContext();
Now, Assign this image to TabBar's
SelectionIndicatorImage
[tabBar setSelectionIndicatorImage:finalImg];
Swift 4 Version:
let imgSize = CGSize(width: tabBar.frame.size.width / CGFloat(tabBar.items!.count),
height: tabBar.frame.size.height)
UIGraphicsBeginImageContextWithOptions(imgSize, false, 0)
let p = UIBezierPath(rect: CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: imgSize.width,
height: imgSize.height))
UIColor.blue.setFill()
p.fill()
let finalImg = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
UIGraphicsEndImageContext()
UITabBar.appearance().selectionIndicatorImage = finalImg
My answer is similar to @Mehul Thakkar but it is in Swift 4 and to improve on his answer I would say that if you place the code in viewDidAppear
as he suggests users will see the change happening which is not good user experience.
So create the custom class for your tabbar controller and in viewDidLoad
place the following code:
let singleTabWidth: CGFloat = self.tabBar.frame.size.width / CGFloat((self.tabBar.items?.count)!)
let singleTabSize = CGSize(width:singleTabWidth , height: self.tabBar.frame.size.height)
let selectedTabBackgroundImage: UIImage = self.imageWithColor(color: .white, size: singleTabSize)
self.tabBar.selectionIndicatorImage = selectedTabBackgroundImage
The imageWithColor
function is below for you:
//image with color and size
func imageWithColor(color: UIColor, size: CGSize) -> UIImage {
let rect = CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: size.width, height: size.height)
UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(rect.size)
let context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext()
context!.setFillColor(color.cgColor)
context!.fill(rect)
let image = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
UIGraphicsEndImageContext()
return image!
}
Hope this helps someone.
Please refer below URL's.
Changing Tint / Background color of UITabBar
How To Change Tab bar color in Xcode
hope this will help you..
try this to change tabbar item color but it only work in ios5.
if ([UITabBar instancesRespondToSelector:@selector(setSelectedImageTintColor:)])
{
[tabBarController.tabBar setSelectedImageTintColor:[UIColor redColor]];
}
You can use tintcolor.
[[UITabBar appearance] setSelectedImageTintColor:[UIColor redColor]];
In AppDelegate.m, put the following code after // Override point for customization after application launch.
Put this in your AppDelegate.m file:
- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions {
// Override point for customization after application launch.
[UITabBar appearance].selectionIndicatorImage = [UIImage imageNamed:@"activeTabBackgroundImage"];
return YES;
}
Answer in swift 4:
setSelectedImageTintColor is deprecated on iOS 8.
Instead use this :
self.tabBar.tintColor = UIColor.white
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17879066/how-do-i-change-background-color-of-uitabitem-when-item-is-selected