Yes, the key is to apply a Negative value to the NSStrokeWidthAttributeName
If this value is positive you will only see the stroke and not the fill.
Objective-C:
self.label.attributedText=[[NSAttributedString alloc]
initWithString:@"string to both stroke and fill"
attributes:@{
NSStrokeWidthAttributeName: @-3.0,
NSStrokeColorAttributeName:[UIColor yellowColor],
NSForegroundColorAttributeName:[UIColor redColor]
}
];
Thanks to @cacau below: See also Technical Q&A QA1531
Swift 4 version:
let attributes: [NSAttributedStringKey : Any] = [.strokeWidth: -3.0,
.strokeColor: UIColor.yellow,
.foregroundColor: UIColor.red]
label.attributedText = NSAttributedString(string: text, attributes: attributes)
Swift 5.1 version:
let attributes: [NSAttributedString.Key : Any] = [.strokeWidth: -3.0,
.strokeColor: UIColor.yellow,
.foregroundColor: UIColor.red]
label.attributedText = NSAttributedString(string: text, attributes: attributes)