- (UIColor *) colorForHex:(NSString *)hexColor { hexColor = [[hexColor stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet: [NSCharacterSet whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet] ] uppercaseString]; // String should be 6 or 7 characters if it includes '#' if ([hexColor length] < 6) return [UIColor blackColor]; // strip # if it appears if ([hexColor hasPrefix:@"#"]) hexColor = [cString substringFromIndex:1]; // if the value isn't 6 characters at this point return // the color black if ([hexColor length] != 6) return [UIColor blackColor]; // Separate into r, g, b substrings NSRange range; range.location = 0; range.length = 2; NSString *rString = [hexColor substringWithRange:range]; range.location = 2; NSString *gString = [hexColor substringWithRange:range]; range.location = 4; NSString *bString = [hexColor substringWithRange:range]; // Scan values unsigned int r, g, b; [[NSScanner scannerWithString:rString] scanHexInt:&r]; [[NSScanner scannerWithString:gString] scanHexInt:&g]; [[NSScanner scannerWithString:bString] scanHexInt:&b]; return [UIColor colorWithRed:((float) r / 255.0f) green:((float) g / 255.0f) blue:((float) b / 255.0f) alpha:1.0f]; }
Notice that we had to first separate our the hex values for the red, green, and blue components first as substrings and then apply the NSScanner to those substrings.