ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

How to change the background color of a UIButton while it's highlighted?

At some point in my app I have a highlighted UIButton (for example when a user has his finger on the button) and I need to change the background color while the button is highlighted (so while the finger of the user is still on the button).

I tried the following:

_button.backgroundColor = [UIColor redColor];

But it is not working. The color remains the same. I tried the same piece of code when the button is not highlighted and it works fine. I also tried calling -setNeedsDisplay after changing the color, it didn't have any effect.

How to force the button to change the background color?


e
eharo2

You can override UIButton's setHighlighted method.

Objective-C

- (void)setHighlighted:(BOOL)highlighted {
    [super setHighlighted:highlighted];

    if (highlighted) {
        self.backgroundColor = UIColorFromRGB(0x387038);
    } else {
        self.backgroundColor = UIColorFromRGB(0x5bb75b);
    }
}

Swift 3.0 and Swift 4.1

override open var isHighlighted: Bool {
    didSet {
        backgroundColor = isHighlighted ? UIColor.black : UIColor.white
    }
}

Just a newbie question, where would you subclass that button method? If I have a button in a view controller named ConversionViewController, how would I setup the button to change the background color when highlighted or tapped? Would I subclass the setHIghlighted in the COnversionViewController?
@YakivKovalskiy assuming you're using a sub-class, you could add two UIColor properties e.g. normalBackground and highlightedBackground, then assign self.backgroundColor = normalBackground or highlightedBackground accordingly. Don't forget to add an init method for ease of use e.g. initWithBackground:highlightedBackground:
Nice solution, just one suggestion: backgroundColor = isHighlighted ? .lightGray : .white
Why nobody had mentioned that the setter is being called only when you tap the button, but not during the initial layout! So by default there is no colour until you touch the button. So to make it work you also need to explicitly call isHighlighted = false somewhere in the beginning (on inititialization for instance).
So, for Objective-C. We must subclass UIButton to achieve this effect, right?
T
Tim

Not sure if this sort of solves what you're after, or fits with your general development landscape but the first thing I would try would be to change the background colour of the button on the touchDown event.

Option 1:

You would need two events to be capture, UIControlEventTouchDown would be for when the user presses the button. UIControlEventTouchUpInside and UIControlEventTouchUpOutside will be for when they release the button to return it to the normal state

UIButton *myButton =  [UIButton buttonWithType:UIButtonTypeCustom];
[myButton setFrame:CGRectMake(10.0f, 10.0f, 100.0f, 20.f)];
[myButton setBackgroundColor:[UIColor blueColor]];
[myButton setTitle:@"click me:" forState:UIControlStateNormal];
[myButton setTitle:@"changed" forState:UIControlStateHighlighted];
[myButton addTarget:self action:@selector(buttonHighlight:) forControlEvents:UIControlEventTouchDown];
[myButton addTarget:self action:@selector(buttonNormal:) forControlEvents:UIControlEventTouchUpInside];

Option 2:

Return an image made from the highlight colour you want. This could also be a category.

+ (UIImage *)imageWithColor:(UIColor *)color {
   CGRect rect = CGRectMake(0.0f, 0.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f);
   UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(rect.size);
   CGContextRef context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();

   CGContextSetFillColorWithColor(context, [color CGColor]);
   CGContextFillRect(context, rect);

   UIImage *image = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext();
   UIGraphicsEndImageContext();

   return image;
}

and then change the highlighted state of the button:

[myButton setBackgroundImage:[self imageWithColor:[UIColor greenColor]] forState:UIControlStateHighlighted];

Add UIControlEventTouchUpOutside and UIControlEventTouchCancel to buttonHighlight: event list and it will work always.
Option two is the best that I have found so far. I guess, however, that storyboards do have their advantages in this case!
Answer by Thomas is better and that's what I use also
If you're using layer.cornerRadius and go with option #2, you'll need to make sure to set clipsToBounds to true to get the image's corners rounded as well.
If someone stops by and needs an answer in Swift: stackoverflow.com/questions/26600980/…
Ş
Şafak Gezer

There is no need to override highlighted as computed property. You can use property observer to trigger background color change:

override var highlighted: Bool {
    didSet {
        backgroundColor = highlighted ? UIColor.lightGrayColor() : UIColor.whiteColor()
    }
}

Swift 4

override open var isHighlighted: Bool {
    didSet {
        backgroundColor = isHighlighted ? UIColor.lightGray : UIColor.white
    }
}

I've never used functionality like this. Can you explain where this goes? Is it in the IBAction buttonPress function or in the viewDidLoad?
What if I have multiple UIButtons with different colors?
@Dave G, you create a new subclass of UIButton by clicking File>New>File>Cocoa Touch Class and setting it to subclass of UIButton. Name the file for ex CustomButton, which will become both the file name and the class name. Inside this file, put the override var highlighted code shown above. Last step, set the UIButton on Interface Builder to use this CustomButton subclass by going to the Property page where it says "Custom Class" and has a dropdown box. It will say "UIButton" in grey letters. The dropdown list should show CustomButton. Select this, and the button is now subclassed.
Why nobody had mentioned that the setter is being called only when you tap the button, but not during the initial layout! So by default there is no colour until you touch the button.
So to make it work you also need to explicitly call isHighlighted = false somewhere in the beginning (on inititialization for instance).
V
ViktoR

An handy generic extension in Swift:

extension UIButton {
    private func imageWithColor(color: UIColor) -> UIImage {
        let rect = CGRectMake(0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 1.0)
        UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(rect.size)
        let context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext()

        CGContextSetFillColorWithColor(context, color.CGColor)
        CGContextFillRect(context, rect)

        let image = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
        UIGraphicsEndImageContext()

        return image
    }

    func setBackgroundColor(color: UIColor, forUIControlState state: UIControlState) {
        self.setBackgroundImage(imageWithColor(color), forState: state)
    }
}

Swift 3.0

extension UIButton {
    private func imageWithColor(color: UIColor) -> UIImage? {
        let rect = CGRect(x: 0.0, y: 0.0, width: 1.0, height: 1.0)
        UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(rect.size)
        let context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext()

        context?.setFillColor(color.cgColor)
        context?.fill(rect)

        let image = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
        UIGraphicsEndImageContext()

        return image
    }

    func setBackgroundColor(_ color: UIColor, for state: UIControlState) {
        self.setBackgroundImage(imageWithColor(color: color), for: state)
    }
}

s
shim

In Swift you can override the accessor of the highlighted (or selected) property rather than overriding the setHighlighted method

override var highlighted: Bool {
        get {
            return super.highlighted
        }
        set {
            if newValue {
                backgroundColor = UIColor.blackColor()
            }
            else {
                backgroundColor = UIColor.whiteColor()
            }
            super.highlighted = newValue
        }
    }

This totally works, but I'm confused how you were able to figure this out? The parameters aren't in the documentation or UIButton.h as far as I can tell.
This is the swift syntax which emulates the behavior of overriding setHightlighted in objective c. See documentation on Computed Properties here developer.apple.com/library/ios/documentation/Swift/Conceptual/…
In swift you could use didSet
I have added example with property observer: stackoverflow.com/a/29186375/195173.
I think what @shimizu was asking was how did you know highlighted was a property on UIButton. The answer is that it is a property on UIControl which UIButton inherits from.
m
mash

Override highlighted variable. Adding @IBInspectable makes you edit the highlighted backgroundColor in storyboard, which is nifty too.

class BackgroundHighlightedButton: UIButton {
    @IBInspectable var highlightedBackgroundColor :UIColor?
    @IBInspectable var nonHighlightedBackgroundColor :UIColor?
    override var highlighted :Bool {
        get {
            return super.highlighted
        }
        set {
            if newValue {
                self.backgroundColor = highlightedBackgroundColor
            }
            else {
                self.backgroundColor = nonHighlightedBackgroundColor
            }
            super.highlighted = newValue
        }
    }
}

F
Federico Zanetello

a more compact solution (based on @aleksejs-mjaliks answer):

Swift 3/4+:

override var isHighlighted: Bool {
    didSet {
        backgroundColor = isHighlighted ? .lightGray : .white
    }
}

Swift 2:

override var highlighted: Bool {
    didSet {
        backgroundColor = highlighted ? UIColor.lightGrayColor() : UIColor.whiteColor()
    }
}

If you don't want to override, this is an updated version of @timur-bernikowich's answer (Swift 4.2):

extension UIButton {
  func setBackgroundColor(_ color: UIColor, forState controlState: UIControl.State) {
    let colorImage = UIGraphicsImageRenderer(size: CGSize(width: 1, height: 1)).image { _ in
      color.setFill()
      UIBezierPath(rect: CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: 1, height: 1)).fill()
    }
    setBackgroundImage(colorImage, for: controlState)
  }
}

@FedericoZanetello this will override isHighlighted in all the buttons in your app, which isn't a good solution in my opinion. ill go with Timur's answer.
T
Timur Bernikovich

Solution for Swift 3+ without subclassing.

extension UIButton {
  func setBackgroundColor(_ color: UIColor, for state: UIControlState) {
    let rect = CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: 1, height: 1)
    UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(rect.size)
    color.setFill()
    UIRectFill(rect)
    let colorImage = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
    UIGraphicsEndImageContext()
    setBackgroundImage(colorImage, for: state)
  }
}

With this extension it's easy to manage colors for different states and it will fade your normal color automatically in case highlighted color is not provided.

button.setBackgroundColor(.red, for: .normal)

Nice, this works great in Swift 5 as well.
I really appreciate this answer because it is exactly what is missing from the API. It's analogous to the existing setTitle(for:). It should be the accepted answer IMHO.
M
Maverick

UIButton extension with Swift 3+ syntax:

extension UIButton {
    func setBackgroundColor(color: UIColor, forState: UIControlState) {
        UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(CGSize(width: 1, height: 1))
        UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext()!.setFillColor(color.cgColor)
        UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext()!.fill(CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: 1, height: 1))
        let colorImage = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
        UIGraphicsEndImageContext()
        self.setBackgroundImage(colorImage, for: forState)
    }}

Use it like:

YourButton.setBackgroundColor(color: UIColor.white, forState: .highlighted)

Original Answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/30604658/3659227


F
Fostah

Here's an approach in Swift, using a UIButton extension to add an IBInspectable, called highlightedBackgroundColor. Similar to subclassing, without requiring a subclass.

private var HighlightedBackgroundColorKey = 0
private var NormalBackgroundColorKey = 0

extension UIButton {

    @IBInspectable var highlightedBackgroundColor: UIColor? {
        get {
            return objc_getAssociatedObject(self, &HighlightedBackgroundColorKey) as? UIColor
        }

        set(newValue) {
            objc_setAssociatedObject(self,
                &HighlightedBackgroundColorKey, newValue, UInt(OBJC_ASSOCIATION_RETAIN))
        }
    }

    private var normalBackgroundColor: UIColor? {
        get {
            return objc_getAssociatedObject(self, &NormalBackgroundColorKey) as? UIColor
        }

        set(newValue) {
            objc_setAssociatedObject(self,
                &NormalBackgroundColorKey, newValue, UInt(OBJC_ASSOCIATION_RETAIN))
        }
    }

    override public var backgroundColor: UIColor? {
        didSet {
            if !highlighted {
                normalBackgroundColor = backgroundColor
            }
        }
    }

    override public var highlighted: Bool {
        didSet {
            if let highlightedBackgroundColor = self.highlightedBackgroundColor {
                if highlighted {
                    backgroundColor = highlightedBackgroundColor
                } else {
                    backgroundColor = normalBackgroundColor
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

I hope this helps.


For swift 2.0, you will need to update the call to objc_setAssociatedObject to use an enum: objc_setAssociatedObject(self, &NormalBackgroundColorKey, newValue, .OBJC_ASSOCIATION_RETAIN)
Definitely best way in Swift if you want to keep it all in Storyboard.
I prefer using subclass not extension as this will affect the whole app
D
Damien Romito

You can use this category which add the method setBackgroundColor:forState:

https://github.com/damienromito/UIButton-setBackgroundColor-forState-


Huge advantage that it doesn't require subclassing.
V
Vasily Bodnarchuk

Details

Xcode 11.1 (11A1027), Swift 5

Solution

import UIKit

extension UIColor {
    func createOnePixelImage() -> UIImage? {
        let size = CGSize(width: 1, height: 1)
        UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(size)
        defer { UIGraphicsEndImageContext() }
        guard let context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext() else { return nil }
        context.setFillColor(cgColor)
        context.fill(CGRect(origin: .zero, size: size))
        return UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
    }
}

extension UIButton {
    func setBackground(_ color: UIColor, for state: UIControl.State) {
        setBackgroundImage(color.createOnePixelImage(), for: state)
    }
}

Usage

button.setBackground(.green, for: .normal)

K
Karan Alangat

Try this !!!!

For TouchedDown Event set One color and for TouchUpInside set the other.

- (IBAction)touchedDown:(id)sender {
    NSLog(@"Touched Down");
    btn1.backgroundColor=[UIColor redColor];
}

- (IBAction)touchUpInside:(id)sender {
    NSLog(@"TouchUpInside");
    btn1.backgroundColor=[UIColor whiteColor];    
}

Worked for me. I just had to add - (IBAction)onButtonTouchDragOutside:(UIButton *)sender { to make sure the colour doesn't remain on when the user accidentally drags his finger off the button.
d
dengST30
extension UIButton {
    func setBackgroundColor(color: UIColor, forState: UIControl.State) {
        let size = CGSize(width: 1, height: 1)
        UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(size)
        let context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext()
        context?.setFillColor(color.cgColor)
        context?.fill(CGRect(origin: CGPoint.zero, size: size))
        let colorImage = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
        UIGraphicsEndImageContext()
        setBackgroundImage(colorImage, for: forState)
    }

}

Swift 5 , thanks @Maverick


m
ma11hew28

UPDATE:

Use the UIButtonBackgroundColor Swift library.

OLD:

Use the helpers below to create a 1 px x 1 px image with a grayscale fill color:

UIImage *image = ACUTilingImageGray(248/255.0, 1);

or an RGB fill color:

UIImage *image = ACUTilingImageRGB(253/255.0, 123/255.0, 43/255.0, 1);

Then, use that image to set the button's background image:

[button setBackgroundImage:image forState:UIControlStateNormal];

Helpers

#pragma mark - Helpers

UIImage *ACUTilingImageGray(CGFloat gray, CGFloat alpha)
{
    return ACUTilingImage(alpha, ^(CGContextRef context) {
        CGContextSetGrayFillColor(context, gray, alpha);
    });
}

UIImage *ACUTilingImageRGB(CGFloat red, CGFloat green, CGFloat blue, CGFloat alpha)
{
    return ACUTilingImage(alpha, ^(CGContextRef context) {
        CGContextSetRGBFillColor(context, red, green, blue, alpha);
    });
}

UIImage *ACUTilingImage(CGFloat alpha, void (^setFillColor)(CGContextRef context))
{
    CGRect rect = CGRectMake(0, 0, 0.5, 0.5);
    UIGraphicsBeginImageContextWithOptions(rect.size, alpha == 1, 0);
    CGContextRef context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext();
    setFillColor(context);
    CGContextFillRect(context, rect);
    UIImage *image = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext();
    UIGraphicsEndImageContext();
    return image;
}

Note: ACU is the class prefix of my Cocoa Touch Static Library called Acani Utilities, where AC is for Acani, and U is for Utilities.


M
Muhammad Ahmad

simple is that use that UIButton Extension ONLY

extension UIButton {

    func setBackgroundColor(color: UIColor, forState: UIControl.State) {
        self.clipsToBounds = true  // add this to maintain corner radius
        UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(CGSize(width: 1, height: 1))
        if let context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext() {
            context.setFillColor(color.cgColor)
            context.fill(CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: 1, height: 1))
            let colorImage = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
            UIGraphicsEndImageContext()
            self.setBackgroundImage(colorImage, for: forState)
        }
    }

}

and use this

 optionButton.setBackgroundColor(color: UIColor(red:0.09, green:0.42, blue:0.82, alpha:1.0), forState: .selected)

 optionButton.setBackgroundColor(color: UIColor(red:0.96, green:0.96, blue:0.96, alpha:1.0), forState: .highlighted)

 optionButton.setBackgroundColor(color: UIColor(red:0.96, green:0.96, blue:0.96, alpha:1.0), forState: .normal)

B
Bence Pattogato

Subclass the UIButton and add inspectable properties for convenient use (written in Swift 3.0):

final class SelectableBackgroundButton: UIButton {

    private struct Constants {
        static let animationDuration: NSTimeInterval = 0.1
    }

    @IBInspectable
    var animatedColorChange: Bool = true

    @IBInspectable
    var selectedBgColor: UIColor = UIColor.blackColor().colorWithAlphaComponent(0.2)

    @IBInspectable
    var normalBgColor: UIColor = UIColor.clearColor()

    override var selected: Bool {
        didSet {
            if animatedColorChange {
                UIView.animateWithDuration(Constants.animationDuration) {
                    self.backgroundColor = self.selected ? self.selectedBgColor : self.normalBgColor
                }
            } else {
                self.backgroundColor = selected ? selectedBgColor : normalBgColor
            }
        }
    }

    override var highlighted: Bool {
        didSet {
            if animatedColorChange {
                UIView.animateWithDuration(Constants.animationDuration) {
                    self.backgroundColor = self.highlighted ? self.selectedBgColor : self.normalBgColor
                }
            } else {
                self.backgroundColor = highlighted ? selectedBgColor : normalBgColor
            }
        }
    }
}

R
Recycled Steel

You can subclass the UIButton and make a nice forState.

colourButton.h

#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>

@interface colourButton : UIButton

-(void)setBackgroundColor:(UIColor *)backgroundColor forState:(UIControlState)state;

@end

colourButton.m

#import "colourButton.h"

@implementation colourButton
{
    NSMutableDictionary *colours;
}

-(id)initWithCoder:(NSCoder *)aDecoder
{
    self = [super initWithCoder:aDecoder];

    // If colours does not exist
    if(!colours)
    {
        colours = [NSMutableDictionary new];  // The dictionary is used to store the colour, the key is a text version of the ENUM
        colours[[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%lu", UIControlStateNormal]] = (UIColor*)self.backgroundColor;  // Store the original background colour
    }

    return self;
}

-(void)setBackgroundColor:(UIColor *)backgroundColor forState:(UIControlState)state
{
    // If it is normal then set the standard background here
    if(state & UIControlStateNormal)
    {
        [super setBackgroundColor:backgroundColor];
    }

    // Store the background colour for that state
    colours[[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%lu", state]]= backgroundColor;
}

-(void)setHighlighted:(BOOL)highlighted
{
    // Do original Highlight
    [super setHighlighted:highlighted];

    // Highlight with new colour OR replace with orignial
    if (highlighted && colours[[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%lu", UIControlStateHighlighted]])
    {
        self.backgroundColor = colours[[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%lu", UIControlStateHighlighted]];
    }
    else
    {
        self.backgroundColor = colours[[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%lu", UIControlStateNormal]];
    }
}

-(void)setSelected:(BOOL)selected
{
    // Do original Selected
    [super setSelected:selected];

    // Select with new colour OR replace with orignial
    if (selected && colours[[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%lu", UIControlStateSelected]])
    {
        self.backgroundColor = colours[[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%lu", UIControlStateSelected]];
    }
    else
    {
        self.backgroundColor = colours[[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%lu", UIControlStateNormal]];
    }
}

@end

Notes (This is an example, I know there are problems and here are some)

I have used an NSMutableDictionay to store the UIColor for each State, I have to do a nasty text conversion for the Key as the UIControlState is not a nice straight Int. If it where you could init an Array with that many objects and use the State as an index.

Because of this you many have difficulties with e.g. a selected & disabled button, some more logic is needed.

Another problem is if you try and set multiple colours at the same time, I have not tried with a button but if you can do this it may not work

 [btn setBackgroundColor:colour forState:UIControlStateSelected & UIControlStateHighlighted];

I have assumed this is StoryBoard, there is no init, initWithFrame so add them if you need them.


P
Pang

Try this if you have an image:

-(void)setBackgroundImage:(UIImage *)image forState:(UIControlState)state;

or see if showsTouchWhenHighlighted is enough for you.


I tried playing around with showsTouchWhenHighlighted but it didn't help. I don't want to use setBackgroundImage:forState:. I was in fact trying to use the backgroundColor to not use any image.
S
Stunner

I have open-sourced a UIButton subclass, STAButton, to fill in this gaping functionality hole. Available under the MIT license. Works for iOS 7+ (I have not tested with older iOS versions).


G
Gabriel.Massana

To solve this problem I created a Category to handle backgroundColor States with UIButtons:
ButtonBackgroundColor-iOS

You can install the category as a pod.

Easy to use with Objective-C

@property (nonatomic, strong) UIButton *myButton;

...

[self.myButton bbc_backgroundColorNormal:[UIColor redColor]
                 backgroundColorSelected:[UIColor blueColor]];

Even more easy to use with Swift:

import ButtonBackgroundColor

...

let myButton:UIButton = UIButton(type:.Custom)

myButton.bbc_backgroundColorNormal(UIColor.redColor(), backgroundColorSelected: UIColor.blueColor())

I recommend you import the pod with:

platform :ios, '8.0'
use_frameworks!

pod 'ButtonBackgroundColor', '~> 1.0'

Using use_frameworks! in your Podfile makes easier to use your pods with Swift and objective-C.

IMPORTANT

I also wrote a Blog Post with more information.


e
evya
class CustomButton: UIButton {

    override var isHighlighted: Bool {
        didSet {
            if (isHighlighted) {
                alpha = 0.5
            }
            else {
                alpha = 1
            }            
        }
    }

}

s
swordray

Use https://github.com/swordray/UIButtonSetBackgroundColorForState

Add to Podfile using CocoaPods

pod "UIButtonSetBackgroundColorForState"

Swift

button.setBackgroundColor(.red, forState: .highlighted)

Objective-C

[button setBackgroundColor:[UIColor redColor] forState:UIControlStateHighlighted];

j
jjv360

Try tintColor:

_button.tintColor = [UIColor redColor];

Are you sure it's linked in IB? What do you get if you do NSLog(@"%@", _button);?
This won't work if you're using a UIButtonTypeCustom.
M
Mike Zriel

Here is the code in Swift to select for button state:

func imageWithColor(color:UIColor) -> UIImage {
    let rect:CGRect = CGRectMake(0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 1.0)
     UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(rect.size)
    let context:CGContextRef = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext()!
    CGContextSetFillColorWithColor(context, color.CGColor)
    CGContextFillRect(context, rect)
    let image:UIImage = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext();
    return image;
}

Example:

    self.button.setImage(self.imageWithColor(UIColor.blackColor()), forState: .Highlighted)

s
shoe

Drop it in and you're good to go: *proerty can be set in IB, and if no highlighted background is set, background will not change when pressed

private var highlightedBackgroundColors = [UIButton:UIColor]()
private var unhighlightedBackgroundColors = [UIButton:UIColor]()
extension UIButton {

    @IBInspectable var highlightedBackgroundColor: UIColor? {
        get {
            return highlightedBackgroundColors[self]
        }

        set {
            highlightedBackgroundColors[self] = newValue
        }
    }

    override open var backgroundColor: UIColor? {
        get {
            return super.backgroundColor
        }

        set {
            unhighlightedBackgroundColors[self] = newValue
            super.backgroundColor = newValue
        }
    }

    override open var isHighlighted: Bool {
        get {
            return super.isHighlighted
        }

        set {
            if highlightedBackgroundColor != nil {
                super.backgroundColor = newValue ? highlightedBackgroundColor : unhighlightedBackgroundColors[self]
            }
            super.isHighlighted = newValue
        }
    }
}

Y
Yonathan Goriachnick

You can easily change the highlighted/selected button background color by simply using the setBackgroundImage method on UIButton and using an image by using this UIImage(color:) initializer, like this:

btn.setBackgroundImage(UIImage(color: .black), for: .highlighted)

Note:

If you use the cornerRadius property for rounded borders you have to set the clipsToBounds to true so the selected background color will reserve the corner radius value.


What version of iOS/Swift does this apply to? In iOS15/Swift 5 there doesn't appear to be a UIImage constructor that takes a "color".
R
Roman Bambura

if you won't override just set two action touchDown touchUpInside


E
Elita

Swift 3:

extension UIButton {
    private func imageWithColor(color: UIColor) -> UIImage {
        let rect = CGRect(x:0.0,y:0.0,width: 1.0,height: 1.0)
        UIGraphicsBeginImageContext(rect.size)
        let context = UIGraphicsGetCurrentContext()

        context!.setFillColor(color.cgColor)
        context!.fill(rect)

        let image = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()
        UIGraphicsEndImageContext()

        return image!
    }

    func setBackgroundColor(color: UIColor, forUIControlState state: UIControlState) {
        self.setBackgroundImage(imageWithColor(color: color), for: state)
    }
}

b
byJeevan

Below UIIImage extension will generates image object with specified color parameter.

extension UIImage {
    static func imageWithColor(tintColor: UIColor) -> UIImage {
        let rect = CGRect(x: 0, y: 0, width: 1, height: 1)
        UIGraphicsBeginImageContextWithOptions(rect.size, false, 0)
        tintColor.setFill()
        UIRectFill(rect)
        let image: UIImage = UIGraphicsGetImageFromCurrentImageContext()!
        UIGraphicsEndImageContext()
        return image
       }
    }

An example usage for a button can be applied for the button object as :

setupButton.setBackgroundImage(UIImage.imageWithColor(tintColor: UIColor(displayP3Red: 232/255, green: 130/255, blue: 121/255, alpha: 1.0)), for: UIControlState.highlighted)

setupButton.setBackgroundImage(UIImage.imageWithColor(tintColor: UIColor(displayP3Red: 255/255, green: 194/255, blue: 190/255, alpha: 1.0)), for: UIControlState.normal)