JSON Parsing sometimes crashes Swift - json

I am parsing JSON in my iOS app and sometimes when the network connection is weak but isn’t gone, the app will crash while trying to parse the JSON, because it says it had an error while force unwrapping a nil.
The code I use for that is here.
//
// MessageModel.swift
// truthordare
//
// Created by Dustin Palmatier on 11/2/19.
// Copyright © 2019 Hexham Network. All rights reserved.
//
import UIKit
protocol MessageModelProtocol: class {
func itemsDownloaded(items: NSArray)
}
class MessageModel: NSObject, URLSessionDataDelegate {
//properties
weak var delegate: MessageModelProtocol!
let urlPath = "Redacted" //this will be changed to the path where service.php lives
let deleteUrl = "REDACTED"
func downloadItems(TYPE: String, IDENTIFIER: String) {
let url: URL = URL(string: urlPath)!
var request = URLRequest(url: url)
request.httpMethod = "POST"
let postString = "type=\(TYPE)&identifier=\(IDENTIFIER)";
request.httpBody = postString.data(using: String.Encoding.utf8);
let defaultSession = Foundation.URLSession(configuration: URLSessionConfiguration.default)
let task = defaultSession.dataTask(with: request) { (data: Data?, response: URLResponse?, error: Error?) in
if error != nil {
print("Failed to download data")
}else {
print("Data downloaded")
self.parseJSON(data!)
}
}
task.resume()
}
func deleteItems(TYPE: String, SKU: String) {
let myUrl = URL(string: "https://truthordare.hexhamnetwork.com/api/92fFDd93D/erase.php");
var request = URLRequest(url:myUrl!)
request.httpMethod = "POST"// Compose a query string
let postString = "type=\(TYPE)&sku=\(SKU)";
request.httpBody = postString.data(using: String.Encoding.utf8);
let task = URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: request) { (data: Data?, response: URLResponse?, error: Error?) in
if error != nil
{
print("error=\(error ?? "Empty" as! Error)")
return
}
}
task.resume()
}
func parseJSON(_ data:Data) {
var jsonResult = NSArray()
do{
jsonResult = try JSONSerialization.jsonObject(with: data, options: [.allowFragments, .mutableContainers]) as! NSArray
} catch let error as NSError {
print(error)
}
var jsonElement = NSDictionary()
let tables = NSMutableArray()
for i in 0 ..< jsonResult.count
{
jsonElement = jsonResult[i] as! NSDictionary
let table = TableModel()
//the following insures none of the JsonElement values are nil through optional binding
if let sku = jsonElement["SKU"] as? String,
let message = jsonElement["MESSAGE"] as? String
{
table.sku = sku
table.message = message
}
tables.add(table)
}
DispatchQueue.main.async(execute: { () -> Void in
self.delegate.itemsDownloaded(items: tables)
})
}
}
It crashes once it gets to
self.delegate.itemsDownloaded(items: tables)
It says that it received a nil while force unwrapping
To initialize the delegate I called this within the classes that were calling this.
messageModel.delegate = self

To avoid the crash reliably declare delegate as regular optional
weak var delegate: MessageModelProtocol?
and call it
self.delegate?.itemsDownloaded(items: tables)
In Swift 4+ it's highly recommended to use the Codable protocol and in any Swift version a completion handler rather than protocol / delegate.
And don't use NS... collection types in Swift at all. Use native types. And .mutableContainers / .allowFragments is pointless in Swift if the expected type is a collection type. Omit the parameter.

Related

Swift - Making JSON data available to the viewController [duplicate]

I have created a utility class in my Swift project that handles all the REST requests and responses. I have built a simple REST API so I can test my code. I have created a class method that needs to return an NSArray but because the API call is async I need to return from the method inside the async call. The problem is the async returns void.
If I were doing this in Node I would use JS promises but I can't figure out a solution that works in Swift.
import Foundation
class Bookshop {
class func getGenres() -> NSArray {
println("Hello inside getGenres")
let urlPath = "http://creative.coventry.ac.uk/~bookshop/v1.1/index.php/genre/list"
println(urlPath)
let url: NSURL = NSURL(string: urlPath)
let session = NSURLSession.sharedSession()
var resultsArray:NSArray!
let task = session.dataTaskWithURL(url, completionHandler: {data, response, error -> Void in
println("Task completed")
if(error) {
println(error.localizedDescription)
}
var err: NSError?
var options:NSJSONReadingOptions = NSJSONReadingOptions.MutableContainers
var jsonResult = NSJSONSerialization.JSONObjectWithData(data, options: options, error: &err) as NSDictionary
if(err != nil) {
println("JSON Error \(err!.localizedDescription)")
}
//NSLog("jsonResults %#", jsonResult)
let results: NSArray = jsonResult["genres"] as NSArray
NSLog("jsonResults %#", results)
resultsArray = results
return resultsArray // error [anyObject] is not a subType of 'Void'
})
task.resume()
//return "Hello World!"
// I want to return the NSArray...
}
}
You can pass callback, and call callback inside async call
something like:
class func getGenres(completionHandler: (genres: NSArray) -> ()) {
...
let task = session.dataTaskWithURL(url) {
data, response, error in
...
resultsArray = results
completionHandler(genres: resultsArray)
}
...
task.resume()
}
and then call this method:
override func viewDidLoad() {
Bookshop.getGenres {
genres in
println("View Controller: \(genres)")
}
}
Introduced in Swift 5.5 (iOS 15, macOS 12), we would now use the async-await pattern:
func fetchGenres() async throws -> [Genre] {
…
let (data, _) = try await URLSession.shared.dataTask(for: request)
return try JSONDecoder().decode([Genre].self, from: data)
}
And we would call it like:
let genres = try await fetchGenres()
The async-await syntax is far more concise and natural than the traditional completion handler pattern outlined in my original answer, below.
For more information, see Meet async/await in Swift.
The historic pattern is to use completion handlers closure.
For example, we would often use Result:
func fetchGenres(completion: #escaping (Result<[Genre], Error>) -> Void) {
...
URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: request) { data, _, error in
if let error = error {
DispatchQueue.main.async {
completion(.failure(error))
}
return
}
// parse response here
let results = ...
DispatchQueue.main.async {
completion(.success(results))
}
}.resume()
}
And you’d call it like so:
fetchGenres { results in
switch results {
case .failure(let error):
print(error.localizedDescription)
case .success(let genres):
// use `genres` here, e.g. update model and UI
}
}
// but don’t try to use `genres` here, as the above runs asynchronously
Note, above I’m dispatching the completion handler back to the main queue to simplify model and UI updates. Some developers take exception to this practice and either use whatever queue URLSession used or use their own queue (requiring the caller to manually synchronize the results themselves).
But that’s not material here. The key issue is the use of completion handler to specify the block of code to be run when the asynchronous request is done.
Note, above I retired the use of NSArray (we don’t use those bridged Objective-C types any more). I assume that we had a Genre type and we presumably used JSONDecoder, rather than JSONSerialization, to decode it. But this question didn’t have enough information about the underlying JSON to get into the details here, so I omitted that to avoid clouding the core issue, the use of closures as completion handlers.
Swiftz already offers Future, which is the basic building block of a Promise. A Future is a Promise that cannot fail (all terms here are based on the Scala interpretation, where a Promise is a Monad).
https://github.com/maxpow4h/swiftz/blob/master/swiftz/Future.swift
Hopefully will expand to a full Scala-style Promise eventually (I may write it myself at some point; I'm sure other PRs would be welcome; it's not that difficult with Future already in place).
In your particular case, I would probably create a Result<[Book]> (based on Alexandros Salazar's version of Result). Then your method signature would be:
class func fetchGenres() -> Future<Result<[Book]>> {
Notes
I do not recommend prefixing functions with get in Swift. It will break certain kinds of interoperability with ObjC.
I recommend parsing all the way down to a Book object before returning your results as a Future. There are several ways this system can fail, and it's much more convenient if you check for all of those things before wrapping them up into a Future. Getting to [Book] is much better for the rest of your Swift code than handing around an NSArray.
Swift 4.0
For async Request-Response you can use completion handler. See below I have modified the solution with completion handle paradigm.
func getGenres(_ completion: #escaping (NSArray) -> ()) {
let urlPath = "http://creative.coventry.ac.uk/~bookshop/v1.1/index.php/genre/list"
print(urlPath)
guard let url = URL(string: urlPath) else { return }
let task = URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: url) { (data, response, error) in
guard let data = data else { return }
do {
if let jsonResult = try JSONSerialization.jsonObject(with: data, options: JSONSerialization.ReadingOptions.mutableContainers) as? NSDictionary {
let results = jsonResult["genres"] as! NSArray
print(results)
completion(results)
}
} catch {
//Catch Error here...
}
}
task.resume()
}
You can call this function as below:
getGenres { (array) in
// Do operation with array
}
Swift 3 version of #Alexey Globchastyy's answer:
class func getGenres(completionHandler: #escaping (genres: NSArray) -> ()) {
...
let task = session.dataTask(with:url) {
data, response, error in
...
resultsArray = results
completionHandler(genres: resultsArray)
}
...
task.resume()
}
Swift 5.5, async/wait-based solution
The original test URL provided by the original poster is no longer functional, so I had to change things a bit. This solution is based on a jokes API I found. That API returns a single joke, but I return it as an array of String ([String]), to keep it as consistent as possible with the original post.
class Bookshop {
class func getGenres() async -> [String] {
print("Hello inside getGenres")
let urlPath = "https://geek-jokes.sameerkumar.website/api?format=json"
print(urlPath)
let url = URL(string: urlPath)!
let session = URLSession.shared
typealias Continuation = CheckedContinuation<[String], Never>
let genres = await withCheckedContinuation { (continuation: Continuation) in
let task = session.dataTask(with: url) { data, response, error in
print("Task completed")
var result: [String] = []
defer {
continuation.resume(returning: result)
}
if let error = error {
print(error.localizedDescription)
return
}
guard let data = data else {
return
}
do {
let jsonResult = try JSONSerialization.jsonObject(with: data, options: [.mutableContainers])
print("jsonResult is \(jsonResult)")
if let joke = (jsonResult as? [String: String])?["joke"] {
result = [joke]
}
} catch {
print("JSON Error \(error.localizedDescription)")
print("data was \(String(describing: String(data: data, encoding: .utf8)))")
return
}
}
task.resume()
}
return genres
}
}
async {
let final = await Bookshop.getGenres()
print("Final is \(final)")
}
The withCheckedContinuation is how you made the Swift async function actually run in a separate task/thread.
I hope you're not still stuck on this, but the short answer is that you can't do this in Swift.
An alternative approach would be to return a callback that will provide the data you need as soon as it is ready.
There are 3 ways of creating call back functions namely:
1. Completion handler
2. Notification
3. Delegates
Completion Handler
Inside set of block is executed and returned when source is available, Handler will wait until response comes so that UI can be updated after.
Notification
Bunch of information is triggered over all the app, Listner can retrieve n make use of that info. Async way of getting info through out the project.
Delegates
Set of methods will get triggered when delegate is been called, Source must be provided via methods itself
Swift 5.5:
TL;DR: Swift 5.5 is not yet released(at the time of writing). To use swift 5.5, download swift toolchain development snapshot from here and add compiler flag -Xfrontend -enable-experimental-concurrency. Read more here
This can be achieved easily with async/await feature.
To do so, you should mark your function as async then do the operation inside withUnsafeThrowingContinuation block like following.
class Bookshop {
class func getGenres() async throws -> NSArray {
print("Hello inside getGenres")
let urlPath = "http://creative.coventry.ac.uk/~bookshop/v1.1/index.php/genre/list"
print(urlPath)
let url = URL(string: urlPath)!
let session = URLSession.shared
return try await withUnsafeThrowingContinuation { continuation in
let task = session.dataTask(with: url, completionHandler: {data, response, error -> Void in
print("Task completed")
if(error != nil) {
print(error!.localizedDescription)
continuation.resume(throwing: error!)
return
}
do {
let jsonResult = try JSONSerialization.jsonObject(with: data!, options: .mutableContainers) as? [String: Any]
let results: NSArray = jsonResult!["genres"] as! NSArray
continuation.resume(returning: results)
} catch {
continuation.resume(throwing: error)
}
})
task.resume()
}
}
}
And you can call this function like
#asyncHandler
func check() {
do {
let genres = try await Bookshop.getGenres()
print("Result: \(genres)")
} catch {
print("Error: \(error)")
}
}
Keep in mind that, when calling Bookshop.getGenres method, the caller method should be either async or marked as #asyncHandler
self.urlSession.dataTask(with: request, completionHandler: { (data, response, error) in
self.endNetworkActivity()
var responseError: Error? = error
// handle http response status
if let httpResponse = response as? HTTPURLResponse {
if httpResponse.statusCode > 299 , httpResponse.statusCode != 422 {
responseError = NSError.errorForHTTPStatus(httpResponse.statusCode)
}
}
var apiResponse: Response
if let _ = responseError {
apiResponse = Response(request, response as? HTTPURLResponse, responseError!)
self.logError(apiResponse.error!, request: request)
// Handle if access token is invalid
if let nsError: NSError = responseError as NSError? , nsError.code == 401 {
DispatchQueue.main.async {
apiResponse = Response(request, response as? HTTPURLResponse, data!)
let message = apiResponse.message()
// Unautorized access
// User logout
return
}
}
else if let nsError: NSError = responseError as NSError? , nsError.code == 503 {
DispatchQueue.main.async {
apiResponse = Response(request, response as? HTTPURLResponse, data!)
let message = apiResponse.message()
// Down time
// Server is currently down due to some maintenance
return
}
}
} else {
apiResponse = Response(request, response as? HTTPURLResponse, data!)
self.logResponse(data!, forRequest: request)
}
self.removeRequestedURL(request.url!)
DispatchQueue.main.async(execute: { () -> Void in
completionHandler(apiResponse)
})
}).resume()
There are mainly 3 ways of achieving callback in swift
Closures/Completion handler
Delegates
Notifications
Observers can also be used to get notified once the async task has been completed.
There are some very generic requirements that would like every good API Manager to satisfy:
will implement a protocol-oriented API Client.
APIClient Initial Interface
protocol APIClient {
func send(_ request: APIRequest,
completion: #escaping (APIResponse?, Error?) -> Void)
}
protocol APIRequest: Encodable {
var resourceName: String { get }
}
protocol APIResponse: Decodable {
}
Now Please check complete api structure
// ******* This is API Call Class *****
public typealias ResultCallback<Value> = (Result<Value, Error>) -> Void
/// Implementation of a generic-based API client
public class APIClient {
private let baseEndpointUrl = URL(string: "irl")!
private let session = URLSession(configuration: .default)
public init() {
}
/// Sends a request to servers, calling the completion method when finished
public func send<T: APIRequest>(_ request: T, completion: #escaping ResultCallback<DataContainer<T.Response>>) {
let endpoint = self.endpoint(for: request)
let task = session.dataTask(with: URLRequest(url: endpoint)) { data, response, error in
if let data = data {
do {
// Decode the top level response, and look up the decoded response to see
// if it's a success or a failure
let apiResponse = try JSONDecoder().decode(APIResponse<T.Response>.self, from: data)
if let dataContainer = apiResponse.data {
completion(.success(dataContainer))
} else if let message = apiResponse.message {
completion(.failure(APIError.server(message: message)))
} else {
completion(.failure(APIError.decoding))
}
} catch {
completion(.failure(error))
}
} else if let error = error {
completion(.failure(error))
}
}
task.resume()
}
/// Encodes a URL based on the given request
/// Everything needed for a public request to api servers is encoded directly in this URL
private func endpoint<T: APIRequest>(for request: T) -> URL {
guard let baseUrl = URL(string: request.resourceName, relativeTo: baseEndpointUrl) else {
fatalError("Bad resourceName: \(request.resourceName)")
}
var components = URLComponents(url: baseUrl, resolvingAgainstBaseURL: true)!
// Common query items needed for all api requests
let timestamp = "\(Date().timeIntervalSince1970)"
let hash = "\(timestamp)"
let commonQueryItems = [
URLQueryItem(name: "ts", value: timestamp),
URLQueryItem(name: "hash", value: hash),
URLQueryItem(name: "apikey", value: "")
]
// Custom query items needed for this specific request
let customQueryItems: [URLQueryItem]
do {
customQueryItems = try URLQueryItemEncoder.encode(request)
} catch {
fatalError("Wrong parameters: \(error)")
}
components.queryItems = commonQueryItems + customQueryItems
// Construct the final URL with all the previous data
return components.url!
}
}
// ****** API Request Encodable Protocol *****
public protocol APIRequest: Encodable {
/// Response (will be wrapped with a DataContainer)
associatedtype Response: Decodable
/// Endpoint for this request (the last part of the URL)
var resourceName: String { get }
}
// ****** This Results type Data Container Struct ******
public struct DataContainer<Results: Decodable>: Decodable {
public let offset: Int
public let limit: Int
public let total: Int
public let count: Int
public let results: Results
}
// ***** API Errro Enum ****
public enum APIError: Error {
case encoding
case decoding
case server(message: String)
}
// ****** API Response Struct ******
public struct APIResponse<Response: Decodable>: Decodable {
/// Whether it was ok or not
public let status: String?
/// Message that usually gives more information about some error
public let message: String?
/// Requested data
public let data: DataContainer<Response>?
}
// ***** URL Query Encoder OR JSON Encoder *****
enum URLQueryItemEncoder {
static func encode<T: Encodable>(_ encodable: T) throws -> [URLQueryItem] {
let parametersData = try JSONEncoder().encode(encodable)
let parameters = try JSONDecoder().decode([String: HTTPParam].self, from: parametersData)
return parameters.map { URLQueryItem(name: $0, value: $1.description) }
}
}
// ****** HTTP Pamater Conversion Enum *****
enum HTTPParam: CustomStringConvertible, Decodable {
case string(String)
case bool(Bool)
case int(Int)
case double(Double)
init(from decoder: Decoder) throws {
let container = try decoder.singleValueContainer()
if let string = try? container.decode(String.self) {
self = .string(string)
} else if let bool = try? container.decode(Bool.self) {
self = .bool(bool)
} else if let int = try? container.decode(Int.self) {
self = .int(int)
} else if let double = try? container.decode(Double.self) {
self = .double(double)
} else {
throw APIError.decoding
}
}
var description: String {
switch self {
case .string(let string):
return string
case .bool(let bool):
return String(describing: bool)
case .int(let int):
return String(describing: int)
case .double(let double):
return String(describing: double)
}
}
}
/// **** This is your API Request Endpoint Method in Struct *****
public struct GetCharacters: APIRequest {
public typealias Response = [MyCharacter]
public var resourceName: String {
return "characters"
}
// Parameters
public let name: String?
public let nameStartsWith: String?
public let limit: Int?
public let offset: Int?
// Note that nil parameters will not be used
public init(name: String? = nil,
nameStartsWith: String? = nil,
limit: Int? = nil,
offset: Int? = nil) {
self.name = name
self.nameStartsWith = nameStartsWith
self.limit = limit
self.offset = offset
}
}
// *** This is Model for Above Api endpoint method ****
public struct MyCharacter: Decodable {
public let id: Int
public let name: String?
public let description: String?
}
// ***** These below line you used to call any api call in your controller or view model ****
func viewDidLoad() {
let apiClient = APIClient()
// A simple request with no parameters
apiClient.send(GetCharacters()) { response in
response.map { dataContainer in
print(dataContainer.results)
}
}
}
This is a small use case that might be helpful:-
func testUrlSession(urlStr:String, completionHandler: #escaping ((String) -> Void)) {
let url = URL(string: urlStr)!
let task = URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: url){(data, response, error) in
guard let data = data else { return }
if let strContent = String(data: data, encoding: .utf8) {
completionHandler(strContent)
}
}
task.resume()
}
While calling the function:-
testUrlSession(urlStr: "YOUR-URL") { (value) in
print("Your string value ::- \(value)")
}

How to Return JSON object from function in Swift [duplicate]

I have created a utility class in my Swift project that handles all the REST requests and responses. I have built a simple REST API so I can test my code. I have created a class method that needs to return an NSArray but because the API call is async I need to return from the method inside the async call. The problem is the async returns void.
If I were doing this in Node I would use JS promises but I can't figure out a solution that works in Swift.
import Foundation
class Bookshop {
class func getGenres() -> NSArray {
println("Hello inside getGenres")
let urlPath = "http://creative.coventry.ac.uk/~bookshop/v1.1/index.php/genre/list"
println(urlPath)
let url: NSURL = NSURL(string: urlPath)
let session = NSURLSession.sharedSession()
var resultsArray:NSArray!
let task = session.dataTaskWithURL(url, completionHandler: {data, response, error -> Void in
println("Task completed")
if(error) {
println(error.localizedDescription)
}
var err: NSError?
var options:NSJSONReadingOptions = NSJSONReadingOptions.MutableContainers
var jsonResult = NSJSONSerialization.JSONObjectWithData(data, options: options, error: &err) as NSDictionary
if(err != nil) {
println("JSON Error \(err!.localizedDescription)")
}
//NSLog("jsonResults %#", jsonResult)
let results: NSArray = jsonResult["genres"] as NSArray
NSLog("jsonResults %#", results)
resultsArray = results
return resultsArray // error [anyObject] is not a subType of 'Void'
})
task.resume()
//return "Hello World!"
// I want to return the NSArray...
}
}
You can pass callback, and call callback inside async call
something like:
class func getGenres(completionHandler: (genres: NSArray) -> ()) {
...
let task = session.dataTaskWithURL(url) {
data, response, error in
...
resultsArray = results
completionHandler(genres: resultsArray)
}
...
task.resume()
}
and then call this method:
override func viewDidLoad() {
Bookshop.getGenres {
genres in
println("View Controller: \(genres)")
}
}
Introduced in Swift 5.5 (iOS 15, macOS 12), we would now use the async-await pattern:
func fetchGenres() async throws -> [Genre] {
…
let (data, _) = try await URLSession.shared.dataTask(for: request)
return try JSONDecoder().decode([Genre].self, from: data)
}
And we would call it like:
let genres = try await fetchGenres()
The async-await syntax is far more concise and natural than the traditional completion handler pattern outlined in my original answer, below.
For more information, see Meet async/await in Swift.
The historic pattern is to use completion handlers closure.
For example, we would often use Result:
func fetchGenres(completion: #escaping (Result<[Genre], Error>) -> Void) {
...
URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: request) { data, _, error in
if let error = error {
DispatchQueue.main.async {
completion(.failure(error))
}
return
}
// parse response here
let results = ...
DispatchQueue.main.async {
completion(.success(results))
}
}.resume()
}
And you’d call it like so:
fetchGenres { results in
switch results {
case .failure(let error):
print(error.localizedDescription)
case .success(let genres):
// use `genres` here, e.g. update model and UI
}
}
// but don’t try to use `genres` here, as the above runs asynchronously
Note, above I’m dispatching the completion handler back to the main queue to simplify model and UI updates. Some developers take exception to this practice and either use whatever queue URLSession used or use their own queue (requiring the caller to manually synchronize the results themselves).
But that’s not material here. The key issue is the use of completion handler to specify the block of code to be run when the asynchronous request is done.
Note, above I retired the use of NSArray (we don’t use those bridged Objective-C types any more). I assume that we had a Genre type and we presumably used JSONDecoder, rather than JSONSerialization, to decode it. But this question didn’t have enough information about the underlying JSON to get into the details here, so I omitted that to avoid clouding the core issue, the use of closures as completion handlers.
Swiftz already offers Future, which is the basic building block of a Promise. A Future is a Promise that cannot fail (all terms here are based on the Scala interpretation, where a Promise is a Monad).
https://github.com/maxpow4h/swiftz/blob/master/swiftz/Future.swift
Hopefully will expand to a full Scala-style Promise eventually (I may write it myself at some point; I'm sure other PRs would be welcome; it's not that difficult with Future already in place).
In your particular case, I would probably create a Result<[Book]> (based on Alexandros Salazar's version of Result). Then your method signature would be:
class func fetchGenres() -> Future<Result<[Book]>> {
Notes
I do not recommend prefixing functions with get in Swift. It will break certain kinds of interoperability with ObjC.
I recommend parsing all the way down to a Book object before returning your results as a Future. There are several ways this system can fail, and it's much more convenient if you check for all of those things before wrapping them up into a Future. Getting to [Book] is much better for the rest of your Swift code than handing around an NSArray.
Swift 4.0
For async Request-Response you can use completion handler. See below I have modified the solution with completion handle paradigm.
func getGenres(_ completion: #escaping (NSArray) -> ()) {
let urlPath = "http://creative.coventry.ac.uk/~bookshop/v1.1/index.php/genre/list"
print(urlPath)
guard let url = URL(string: urlPath) else { return }
let task = URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: url) { (data, response, error) in
guard let data = data else { return }
do {
if let jsonResult = try JSONSerialization.jsonObject(with: data, options: JSONSerialization.ReadingOptions.mutableContainers) as? NSDictionary {
let results = jsonResult["genres"] as! NSArray
print(results)
completion(results)
}
} catch {
//Catch Error here...
}
}
task.resume()
}
You can call this function as below:
getGenres { (array) in
// Do operation with array
}
Swift 3 version of #Alexey Globchastyy's answer:
class func getGenres(completionHandler: #escaping (genres: NSArray) -> ()) {
...
let task = session.dataTask(with:url) {
data, response, error in
...
resultsArray = results
completionHandler(genres: resultsArray)
}
...
task.resume()
}
Swift 5.5, async/wait-based solution
The original test URL provided by the original poster is no longer functional, so I had to change things a bit. This solution is based on a jokes API I found. That API returns a single joke, but I return it as an array of String ([String]), to keep it as consistent as possible with the original post.
class Bookshop {
class func getGenres() async -> [String] {
print("Hello inside getGenres")
let urlPath = "https://geek-jokes.sameerkumar.website/api?format=json"
print(urlPath)
let url = URL(string: urlPath)!
let session = URLSession.shared
typealias Continuation = CheckedContinuation<[String], Never>
let genres = await withCheckedContinuation { (continuation: Continuation) in
let task = session.dataTask(with: url) { data, response, error in
print("Task completed")
var result: [String] = []
defer {
continuation.resume(returning: result)
}
if let error = error {
print(error.localizedDescription)
return
}
guard let data = data else {
return
}
do {
let jsonResult = try JSONSerialization.jsonObject(with: data, options: [.mutableContainers])
print("jsonResult is \(jsonResult)")
if let joke = (jsonResult as? [String: String])?["joke"] {
result = [joke]
}
} catch {
print("JSON Error \(error.localizedDescription)")
print("data was \(String(describing: String(data: data, encoding: .utf8)))")
return
}
}
task.resume()
}
return genres
}
}
async {
let final = await Bookshop.getGenres()
print("Final is \(final)")
}
The withCheckedContinuation is how you made the Swift async function actually run in a separate task/thread.
I hope you're not still stuck on this, but the short answer is that you can't do this in Swift.
An alternative approach would be to return a callback that will provide the data you need as soon as it is ready.
There are 3 ways of creating call back functions namely:
1. Completion handler
2. Notification
3. Delegates
Completion Handler
Inside set of block is executed and returned when source is available, Handler will wait until response comes so that UI can be updated after.
Notification
Bunch of information is triggered over all the app, Listner can retrieve n make use of that info. Async way of getting info through out the project.
Delegates
Set of methods will get triggered when delegate is been called, Source must be provided via methods itself
Swift 5.5:
TL;DR: Swift 5.5 is not yet released(at the time of writing). To use swift 5.5, download swift toolchain development snapshot from here and add compiler flag -Xfrontend -enable-experimental-concurrency. Read more here
This can be achieved easily with async/await feature.
To do so, you should mark your function as async then do the operation inside withUnsafeThrowingContinuation block like following.
class Bookshop {
class func getGenres() async throws -> NSArray {
print("Hello inside getGenres")
let urlPath = "http://creative.coventry.ac.uk/~bookshop/v1.1/index.php/genre/list"
print(urlPath)
let url = URL(string: urlPath)!
let session = URLSession.shared
return try await withUnsafeThrowingContinuation { continuation in
let task = session.dataTask(with: url, completionHandler: {data, response, error -> Void in
print("Task completed")
if(error != nil) {
print(error!.localizedDescription)
continuation.resume(throwing: error!)
return
}
do {
let jsonResult = try JSONSerialization.jsonObject(with: data!, options: .mutableContainers) as? [String: Any]
let results: NSArray = jsonResult!["genres"] as! NSArray
continuation.resume(returning: results)
} catch {
continuation.resume(throwing: error)
}
})
task.resume()
}
}
}
And you can call this function like
#asyncHandler
func check() {
do {
let genres = try await Bookshop.getGenres()
print("Result: \(genres)")
} catch {
print("Error: \(error)")
}
}
Keep in mind that, when calling Bookshop.getGenres method, the caller method should be either async or marked as #asyncHandler
self.urlSession.dataTask(with: request, completionHandler: { (data, response, error) in
self.endNetworkActivity()
var responseError: Error? = error
// handle http response status
if let httpResponse = response as? HTTPURLResponse {
if httpResponse.statusCode > 299 , httpResponse.statusCode != 422 {
responseError = NSError.errorForHTTPStatus(httpResponse.statusCode)
}
}
var apiResponse: Response
if let _ = responseError {
apiResponse = Response(request, response as? HTTPURLResponse, responseError!)
self.logError(apiResponse.error!, request: request)
// Handle if access token is invalid
if let nsError: NSError = responseError as NSError? , nsError.code == 401 {
DispatchQueue.main.async {
apiResponse = Response(request, response as? HTTPURLResponse, data!)
let message = apiResponse.message()
// Unautorized access
// User logout
return
}
}
else if let nsError: NSError = responseError as NSError? , nsError.code == 503 {
DispatchQueue.main.async {
apiResponse = Response(request, response as? HTTPURLResponse, data!)
let message = apiResponse.message()
// Down time
// Server is currently down due to some maintenance
return
}
}
} else {
apiResponse = Response(request, response as? HTTPURLResponse, data!)
self.logResponse(data!, forRequest: request)
}
self.removeRequestedURL(request.url!)
DispatchQueue.main.async(execute: { () -> Void in
completionHandler(apiResponse)
})
}).resume()
There are mainly 3 ways of achieving callback in swift
Closures/Completion handler
Delegates
Notifications
Observers can also be used to get notified once the async task has been completed.
There are some very generic requirements that would like every good API Manager to satisfy:
will implement a protocol-oriented API Client.
APIClient Initial Interface
protocol APIClient {
func send(_ request: APIRequest,
completion: #escaping (APIResponse?, Error?) -> Void)
}
protocol APIRequest: Encodable {
var resourceName: String { get }
}
protocol APIResponse: Decodable {
}
Now Please check complete api structure
// ******* This is API Call Class *****
public typealias ResultCallback<Value> = (Result<Value, Error>) -> Void
/// Implementation of a generic-based API client
public class APIClient {
private let baseEndpointUrl = URL(string: "irl")!
private let session = URLSession(configuration: .default)
public init() {
}
/// Sends a request to servers, calling the completion method when finished
public func send<T: APIRequest>(_ request: T, completion: #escaping ResultCallback<DataContainer<T.Response>>) {
let endpoint = self.endpoint(for: request)
let task = session.dataTask(with: URLRequest(url: endpoint)) { data, response, error in
if let data = data {
do {
// Decode the top level response, and look up the decoded response to see
// if it's a success or a failure
let apiResponse = try JSONDecoder().decode(APIResponse<T.Response>.self, from: data)
if let dataContainer = apiResponse.data {
completion(.success(dataContainer))
} else if let message = apiResponse.message {
completion(.failure(APIError.server(message: message)))
} else {
completion(.failure(APIError.decoding))
}
} catch {
completion(.failure(error))
}
} else if let error = error {
completion(.failure(error))
}
}
task.resume()
}
/// Encodes a URL based on the given request
/// Everything needed for a public request to api servers is encoded directly in this URL
private func endpoint<T: APIRequest>(for request: T) -> URL {
guard let baseUrl = URL(string: request.resourceName, relativeTo: baseEndpointUrl) else {
fatalError("Bad resourceName: \(request.resourceName)")
}
var components = URLComponents(url: baseUrl, resolvingAgainstBaseURL: true)!
// Common query items needed for all api requests
let timestamp = "\(Date().timeIntervalSince1970)"
let hash = "\(timestamp)"
let commonQueryItems = [
URLQueryItem(name: "ts", value: timestamp),
URLQueryItem(name: "hash", value: hash),
URLQueryItem(name: "apikey", value: "")
]
// Custom query items needed for this specific request
let customQueryItems: [URLQueryItem]
do {
customQueryItems = try URLQueryItemEncoder.encode(request)
} catch {
fatalError("Wrong parameters: \(error)")
}
components.queryItems = commonQueryItems + customQueryItems
// Construct the final URL with all the previous data
return components.url!
}
}
// ****** API Request Encodable Protocol *****
public protocol APIRequest: Encodable {
/// Response (will be wrapped with a DataContainer)
associatedtype Response: Decodable
/// Endpoint for this request (the last part of the URL)
var resourceName: String { get }
}
// ****** This Results type Data Container Struct ******
public struct DataContainer<Results: Decodable>: Decodable {
public let offset: Int
public let limit: Int
public let total: Int
public let count: Int
public let results: Results
}
// ***** API Errro Enum ****
public enum APIError: Error {
case encoding
case decoding
case server(message: String)
}
// ****** API Response Struct ******
public struct APIResponse<Response: Decodable>: Decodable {
/// Whether it was ok or not
public let status: String?
/// Message that usually gives more information about some error
public let message: String?
/// Requested data
public let data: DataContainer<Response>?
}
// ***** URL Query Encoder OR JSON Encoder *****
enum URLQueryItemEncoder {
static func encode<T: Encodable>(_ encodable: T) throws -> [URLQueryItem] {
let parametersData = try JSONEncoder().encode(encodable)
let parameters = try JSONDecoder().decode([String: HTTPParam].self, from: parametersData)
return parameters.map { URLQueryItem(name: $0, value: $1.description) }
}
}
// ****** HTTP Pamater Conversion Enum *****
enum HTTPParam: CustomStringConvertible, Decodable {
case string(String)
case bool(Bool)
case int(Int)
case double(Double)
init(from decoder: Decoder) throws {
let container = try decoder.singleValueContainer()
if let string = try? container.decode(String.self) {
self = .string(string)
} else if let bool = try? container.decode(Bool.self) {
self = .bool(bool)
} else if let int = try? container.decode(Int.self) {
self = .int(int)
} else if let double = try? container.decode(Double.self) {
self = .double(double)
} else {
throw APIError.decoding
}
}
var description: String {
switch self {
case .string(let string):
return string
case .bool(let bool):
return String(describing: bool)
case .int(let int):
return String(describing: int)
case .double(let double):
return String(describing: double)
}
}
}
/// **** This is your API Request Endpoint Method in Struct *****
public struct GetCharacters: APIRequest {
public typealias Response = [MyCharacter]
public var resourceName: String {
return "characters"
}
// Parameters
public let name: String?
public let nameStartsWith: String?
public let limit: Int?
public let offset: Int?
// Note that nil parameters will not be used
public init(name: String? = nil,
nameStartsWith: String? = nil,
limit: Int? = nil,
offset: Int? = nil) {
self.name = name
self.nameStartsWith = nameStartsWith
self.limit = limit
self.offset = offset
}
}
// *** This is Model for Above Api endpoint method ****
public struct MyCharacter: Decodable {
public let id: Int
public let name: String?
public let description: String?
}
// ***** These below line you used to call any api call in your controller or view model ****
func viewDidLoad() {
let apiClient = APIClient()
// A simple request with no parameters
apiClient.send(GetCharacters()) { response in
response.map { dataContainer in
print(dataContainer.results)
}
}
}
This is a small use case that might be helpful:-
func testUrlSession(urlStr:String, completionHandler: #escaping ((String) -> Void)) {
let url = URL(string: urlStr)!
let task = URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: url){(data, response, error) in
guard let data = data else { return }
if let strContent = String(data: data, encoding: .utf8) {
completionHandler(strContent)
}
}
task.resume()
}
While calling the function:-
testUrlSession(urlStr: "YOUR-URL") { (value) in
print("Your string value ::- \(value)")
}

How to add parameters to JSON in function in swift

I have created one function for JSON parsing, which I am calling in every view controller, but i am unable to pass parameters from that function
i have created function in NSObject class:
func serviceCall(_ url: String, _ params:[String : Any], completion: #escaping (Data?, Error?) -> Void) {
let url = URL(string: url)!
var urlRequest = URLRequest(url: url)
urlRequest.httpMethod = "POST" //set http method as POST
do {
urlRequest.httpBody = try JSONSerialization.data(withJSONObject: params, options: .prettyPrinted) // pass dictionary to nsdata object and set it as request body
} catch let error {
print(error.localizedDescription)
}
URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: urlRequest) { data, response, error in
if let error = error {
completion(nil, error)
return
}
guard let data = data else {
preconditionFailure("No error was received but we also don't have data...")
}
completion(data, nil)
}.resume()
}
}
in registrationVC how to add parameters to this function
my parameters for registration service:
struct RegData: Codable {
var jsonrpc: String
var params: PostReg
}
struct PostReg: Codable{
var email: String
var password: String
var device_id: String
}
while calling serviceCall function how to add parameters to it
if i call like this in button action
let url = "https://e/api/reg"
let jsonpostParameters: [String: Any] = RegData(jsonrpc: "2.0", params: (PostLogin(email: nameTf.text!, password: passwordTf.text!, device_id: "2")))
self.fetch(url, jsonpostParameters) { (data: Data?, error: Error?) in
guard let dt = data else { return }
// convert data to JSON
print(dt)
error:
cannot convert a value [String:Any] to RegData
how to add RegData to serviceCall, shall i change serviceCall params type? if yes how..
how add RegData to serviceCall to parse JSON
Kindly try this for decode data
//Here ResponceData is your codable class
let dictData = try JSONSerialization.data(withJSONObject: data, options: .prettyPrinted)
let obj= try JSONDecoder().decode([ResponseData].self, from: dictData)

json data not getting loaded into UITextView in swift

class ViewController:ViewController,UITextViewDelegate{
#IBOutlet weak var newTextView: UITextView!
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
newTextView.delegate = self
dataFun()
}
func dataFun()
{
let url : String = "http:xyz/abc"
let request : NSMutableURLRequest = NSMutableURLRequest()
request.URL = NSURL(string: url)
request.HTTPMethod = "GET"
print("Start")
let session = NSURLSession.sharedSession()
session.dataTaskWithRequest(request) { (data, response, error) -> Void in
do {
let jsonResult: NSDictionary! = try NSJSONSerialization.JSONObjectWithData(data!, options:NSJSONReadingOptions.MutableContainers) as? NSDictionary
print("In method\(jsonResult)")
// let data = jsonResult["description"]
// print(data!)
if (jsonResult != nil)
{
// process jsonResult
print("Data added")
let test:String = jsonResult["description"] as! String
print(test)
self.newTextView.text = test
} else {
print("No Data")
// couldn't load JSON, look at error
}
}
catch {
print("Error Occured")
}
}
.resume()
}
In my app I am going to call services from API
I can see my json data in console.
that data is not show in textviewController
it shows fatal error:
unexpectedly found nil while unwrapping an Optional value
and then crash the app
Make sure #IBOutlet weak var newTextView: UITextView! is set up correctly.
Make sure let test:String = jsonResult["description"] as! String doesn't crash. JSON has field description and it's a string.

How to change JSON POST request to handle HTTPS

Below is my login function. It's a JSON POST request and before, when the URL was http, it worked flawlessly. I attached a JSON filled with the username/password of the user. Today we added a SSL Certificate and after switching the URL to https, it produced this error:
NSURLConnection/CFURLConnection HTTP load failed (kCFStreamErrorDomainSSL, -9843)
I'm not really sure what's going on. I typed that error into google and didn't get any where. I appreciate any help, thank you!
func login(params : Dictionary<String, String>, url : String, postCompleted : (succeeded: Bool, msg: String) -> ()) {
var request = NSMutableURLRequest(URL: NSURL(string: url)!)
var session = NSURLSession.sharedSession()
request.HTTPMethod = "POST"
var err: NSError?
request.HTTPBody = NSJSONSerialization.dataWithJSONObject(params, options: nil, error: &err)
request.addValue("application/json", forHTTPHeaderField: "Content-Type")
request.addValue("application/json", forHTTPHeaderField: "Accept")
var task = session.dataTaskWithRequest(request, completionHandler: {data, response, error -> Void in
if response != nil {
if response.isKindOfClass(NSHTTPURLResponse) {
httpResponse = response as NSHTTPURLResponse
if let authorizationID = httpResponse.allHeaderFields["Authorization"] as String! {
Locksmith.saveData(["id":authorizationID], forUserAccount: currentUser, inService: "setUpAuthorizationId")
}
else {
println("Failed")
}
}
}
var err: NSError?
var json = NSJSONSerialization.JSONObjectWithData(data, options: .MutableLeaves, error: &err) as? NSDictionary
// Did the JSONObjectWithData constructor return an error? If so, log the error to the console
if(err != nil) {
println(err!.localizedDescription)
let jsonStr = NSString(data: data, encoding: NSUTF8StringEncoding)
println("Error could not parse JSON: '\(jsonStr!)'")
postCompleted(succeeded: false, msg: "Error")
}
else {
// The JSONObjectWithData constructor didn't return an error. But, we should still
// check and make sure that json has a value using optional binding.
if let parseJSON = json {
// Okay, the parsedJSON is here, let's get the value for 'success' out of it
if let status = parseJSON["status"] as? String {
if let extractData = parseJSON["data"] as? NSDictionary {
let extractUserId:Int = extractData["id"] as Int
userId = extractUserId
}
if status == "success" {
postCompleted(succeeded: true, msg: "Logged in.")
} else {
let failMessage = parseJSON["message"] as? String
postCompleted(succeeded: false, msg: failMessage!)
}
}
return
}
else {
// Woa, okay the json object was nil, something went worng. Maybe the server isn't running?
let jsonStr = NSString(data: data, encoding: NSUTF8StringEncoding)
println("Error could not parse JSON: \(jsonStr)")
postCompleted(succeeded: false, msg: "Error")
}
}
})
task.resume()
}
Using This awesome article I was able to fix my problem. All I needed to do was add:
NSObject, NSURLSessionDelegate, NSURLSessionTaskDelegate
after my class name, and then add these two delegates:
func URLSession(session: NSURLSession,
didReceiveChallenge challenge:
NSURLAuthenticationChallenge,
completionHandler:
(NSURLSessionAuthChallengeDisposition,
NSURLCredential!) -> Void) {
completionHandler(
NSURLSessionAuthChallengeDisposition.UseCredential,
NSURLCredential(forTrust:
challenge.protectionSpace.serverTrust))
}
func URLSession(session: NSURLSession, task: NSURLSessionTask, willPerformHTTPRedirection response: NSHTTPURLResponse, newRequest request: NSURLRequest, completionHandler: (NSURLRequest!) -> Void) {
var newRequest : NSURLRequest? = request
println(newRequest?.description);
completionHandler(newRequest)
}
after that in my actual request I just needed to change:
var session = NSURLSession.sharedSession()
to:
var configuration = NSURLSessionConfiguration.defaultSessionConfiguration()
var session = NSURLSession(configuration: configuration, delegate: self, delegateQueue:NSOperationQueue.mainQueue())
hope this helps someone!!