In iPhone App, while running the App on device How to detect the screen resolution of the device on which App is running?
6 Answers
CGRect screenBounds = [[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds];
That will give you the entire screen's resolution in points, so it would most typically be 320x480 for iPhones. Even though the iPhone4 has a much larger screen size iOS still gives back 320x480 instead of 640x960. This is mostly because of older applications breaking.
CGFloat screenScale = [[UIScreen mainScreen] scale];
This will give you the scale of the screen. For all devices that do not have Retina Displays this will return a 1.0f, while Retina Display devices will give a 2.0f and the iPhone 6 Plus (Retina HD) will give a 3.0f.
Now if you want to get the pixel width & height of the iOS device screen you just need to do one simple thing.
CGSize screenSize = CGSizeMake(screenBounds.size.width * screenScale, screenBounds.size.height * screenScale);
By multiplying by the screen's scale you get the actual pixel resolution.
A good read on the difference between points and pixels in iOS can be read here.
EDIT: (Version for Swift)
let screenBounds = UIScreen.main.bounds
let screenScale = UIScreen.main.scale
let screenSize = CGSize(width: screenBounds.size.width * screenScale, height: screenBounds.size.height * screenScale)
UIScreen class lets you find screen resolution in Points and Pixels.
Screen resolutions is measured in Points or Pixels. It should never be confused with screen size. A smaller screen size can have higher resolution.
UIScreen's 'bounds.width' return rectangular size in Points 
UIScreen's 'nativeBounds.width' return rectangular size in Pixels.This value is detected as PPI ( Point per inch ). Shows the sharpness & clarity of the Image on a device.
You can use UIScreen class to detect all these values.
Swift3
// Normal Screen Bounds - Detect Screen size in Points.
let width = UIScreen.main.bounds.width
let height = UIScreen.main.bounds.height
print("\n width:\(width) \n height:\(height)")
// Native Bounds - Detect Screen size in Pixels.
let nWidth = UIScreen.main.nativeBounds.width
let nHeight = UIScreen.main.nativeBounds.height
print("\n Native Width:\(nWidth) \n Native Height:\(nHeight)")
Console
width:736.0
height:414.0
Native Width:1080.0
Native Height:1920.0
Swift 2.x
//Normal Bounds - Detect Screen size in Points.
let width = UIScreen.mainScreen.bounds.width
let height = UIScreen.mainScreen.bounds.height
// Native Bounds - Detect Screen size in Pixels.
let nWidth = UIScreen.mainScreen.nativeBounds.width
let nHeight = UIScreen.mainScreen.nativeBounds.height
ObjectiveC
// Normal Bounds - Detect Screen size in Points.
CGFloat *width = [UIScreen mainScreen].bounds.size.width;
CGFloat *height = [UIScreen mainScreen].bounds.size.height;
// Native Bounds - Detect Screen size in Pixels.
CGFloat *width = [UIScreen mainScreen].nativeBounds.size.width
CGFloat *height = [UIScreen mainScreen].nativeBounds.size.width
Use it in App Delegate: I am using storyboard
- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions{
if (UI_USER_INTERFACE_IDIOM() == UIUserInterfaceIdiomPhone) {
CGSize iOSDeviceScreenSize = [[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds].size;
//----------------HERE WE SETUP FOR IPHONE 4/4s/iPod----------------------
if(iOSDeviceScreenSize.height == 480){
UIStoryboard *iPhone35Storyboard = [UIStoryboard storyboardWithName:@"iPhone" bundle:nil];
// Instantiate the initial view controller object from the storyboard
UIViewController *initialViewController = [iPhone35Storyboard instantiateInitialViewController];
// Instantiate a UIWindow object and initialize it with the screen size of the iOS device
self.window = [[UIWindow alloc] initWithFrame:[[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds]];
// Set the initial view controller to be the root view controller of the window object
self.window.rootViewController = initialViewController;
// Set the window object to be the key window and show it
[self.window makeKeyAndVisible];
iphone=@"4";
NSLog(@"iPhone 4: %f", iOSDeviceScreenSize.height);
}
//----------------HERE WE SETUP FOR IPHONE 5----------------------
if(iOSDeviceScreenSize.height == 568){
// Instantiate a new storyboard object using the storyboard file named Storyboard_iPhone4
UIStoryboard *iPhone4Storyboard = [UIStoryboard storyboardWithName:@"iPhone5" bundle:nil];
// Instantiate the initial view controller object from the storyboard
UIViewController *initialViewController = [iPhone4Storyboard instantiateInitialViewController];
// Instantiate a UIWindow object and initialize it with the screen size of the iOS device
self.window = [[UIWindow alloc] initWithFrame:[[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds]];
// Set the initial view controller to be the root view controller of the window object
self.window.rootViewController = initialViewController;
// Set the window object to be the key window and show it
[self.window makeKeyAndVisible];
NSLog(@"iPhone 5: %f", iOSDeviceScreenSize.height);
iphone=@"5";
}
} else if (UI_USER_INTERFACE_IDIOM() == UIUserInterfaceIdiomPad) {
// NSLog(@"wqweqe");
storyboard = [UIStoryboard storyboardWithName:@"iPad" bundle:nil];
}
return YES;
}
See the UIScreen Reference: http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/uikit/reference/UIScreen_Class/Reference/UIScreen.html
if([[UIScreen mainScreen] respondsToSelector:NSSelectorFromString(@"scale")])
{
if ([[UIScreen mainScreen] scale] < 1.1)
NSLog(@"Standard Resolution Device");
if ([[UIScreen mainScreen] scale] > 1.9)
NSLog(@"High Resolution Device");
}