The "bullet" character is at Unicode code point U+2022. You can use it in a string with @"u2022"
or [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%C", 0x2022]
.
The "line feed" character is at Unicode code point U+000A, and is used as UIKit's newline character. You can use it in a string with @"
"
.
For example, if you had an array of strings, you could make a bulleted list with something like this:
NSArray * items = ...;
NSMutableString * bulletList = [NSMutableString stringWithCapacity:items.count*30];
for (NSString * s in items)
{
[bulletList appendFormat:@"u2022 %@
", s];
}
textView.text = bulletList;
It won't indent lines like a "proper" word processor. "Bad things" will happen if your list items include newline characters (but what did you expect?).
(Apple doesn't guarantee that "uXXXX" escapes work in NSString literals, but in practice they do if you use Apple's compiler.)
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