When building attributed strings, I prefer to use the mutable subclass, just to keep things cleaner.
That being said, here's how you create a tri-color attributed string:
NSMutableAttributedString *string = [[NSMutableAttributedString alloc] initWithString:@"firstsecondthird"];
[string addAttribute:NSForegroundColorAttributeName value:[UIColor redColor] range:NSMakeRange(0,5)];
[string addAttribute:NSForegroundColorAttributeName value:[UIColor greenColor] range:NSMakeRange(5,6)];
[string addAttribute:NSForegroundColorAttributeName value:[UIColor blueColor] range:NSMakeRange(11,5)];
typed in a browser. caveat implementor
Obviously you're not going to hard-code in the ranges like this. Perhaps instead you could do something like:
NSDictionary *wordToColorMapping = ....; //an NSDictionary of NSString => UIColor pairs
NSMutableAttributedString *string = [[NSMutableAttributedString alloc] initWithString:@""];
for (NSString *word in wordToColorMapping) {
UIColor *color = [wordToColorMapping objectForKey:word];
NSDictionary *attributes = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObject:color forKey:NSForegroundColorAttributeName];
NSAttributedString *subString = [[NSAttributedString alloc] initWithString:word attributes:attributes];
[string appendAttributedString:subString];
[subString release];
}
//display string
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