by Q Branch
By storing colors, fonts, numbers, booleans, and so on in a plist, we were able to iterate quickly on our app Vesper.
Our designers could easily make changes without having to dive into the code or ask engineering to spend time nudging pixels and changing values.
There is nothing magical about the code or the system: it’s some simple code plus a few conventions.
See the demo app. You include two classes — VSThemeLoader and VSTheme — and DB5.plist. The plist is where you set values.
At startup you load the file via VSThemeLoader, then access values via methods in VSTheme.
Most of the methods are straightforward. -[VSTheme boolForKey:] returns a BOOL, and so on.
Some of the methods require multiple values in the plist file. For instance, -[VSTheme fontForKey:] expects the font name as keyName and the size as keyNameSize. See VSTheme.h for more information about these multiple-key values.
Though we haven’t used this capability in Vesper, we made it so that you can have multiple themes. Every theme inherits from the Default theme.
If you ask for a value from a theme other than Default, and that value is not specified in that theme, it falls back to Default to get that value.
The demo app is straightforward and small. DB5AppDelegate loads the themes. DB5ViewController shows some example use.
Also, see the Examples folder for the DB5.plist from Vesper.
DB5 is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for details.