Bridge
Simple Typed JSON HTTP Networking in Swift 4.0
GET
GET<Dict>("http://httpbin.org/ip").execute(success: { (response) in
let ip: Dict = response
})
let postID = "1"
GET<Dict>("http://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/#").execute(postID, success: { (response) in
let post: Dict = response
})
POST
let userComment = ["justin": "wow this is cool"]
let endpoint = POST<[String: AnyObject]>("https://api.bridge.com/comments")
endpoint.execute(params: userComment, success: { (commentResponse: [String: AnyObject]) -> () in
}, failure: { (error, data, request, response) in
})
Interceptors
The power of Bridge is that it lets you create custom "Interceptors" to intercept process your requests before they are sent off to the internets, or to intercept and process your responses before they are returned to the caller's success block.
Attach custom headers based on the endpoint, write retry handling, write authentication handlers, use method tunneling. Interceptors allow Bridge to be extremely extensible to your project needs.
public protocol ResponseInterceptor {
func process<ReturnType>(endpoint: Endpoint<ReturnType>, inout mutableRequest: NSMutableURLRequest)
}
public protocol ResponseInterceptor {
func process<ReturnType>(endpoint: Endpoint<ReturnType>, response: NSHTTPURLResponse?, responseObject: ResponseObject) -> ProcessResults
}
Examples:
Object Serialization
Bridge is implemented using generics which allow you to serialize to objects as long as your objects conform to the Parseable
protocol.
public protocol Parseable {
static func parseResponseObject(responseObject: AnyObject) throws -> AnyObject
}
It is left completely up to the developer on how you want to implement the Parseable
protocol. You can manually create and serialize your objects:
class User: AnyObject, Parseable {
var name: String?
var email: String?
var pictureURL: NSURL?
static func parseResponseObject(responseObject: AnyObject) throws -> AnyObject {
if let dict = responseObject as? Dictionary<String, AnyObject> {
let user = User()
user.name = dict["name"] as? String
user.email = dict["email"] as? String
user.pictureURL = NSURL(string: dict["avatar_url"] as! String)
return user
}
throw BridgeErrorType.Parsing
}
}
Or you can also serialize them using whatever serialization libraries you like. This gist is an example of out out-of-box working solution for Mantle if you're already using Mantle models. No code change is required to your Mantle models.
Once models are setup, making calls are as simple as:
let endpoint = GET<GithubUser>("https://api.github.com/users/rawrjustin")
endpoint.execute(success: { (user: GithubUser) in
print(user)
})
let endpoint = GET<Array<GithubUser>>("https://api.github.com/users")
endpoint.execute(success: { (users: Array<GithubUser>) in
print(users)
}, failure: { (error: NSError?) in
print(error)
})
Advanced Features
Base URL
You can set the base url of your Bridge client
Bridge.sharedInstance.baseURL = "http://api.github.com"
GET<GithubUser>("/users/rawrjustin")
Cancellation by Tag
Easily cancel any requests tagged with an identifier.
Bridge.sharedInstance.cancelWithTag("DebouncedSearch")
Variable endpoints
Similar to how Rails maps :id for resources, #
is used as the character where a variable would be inserted into the path.
GET<Dict>("/photos/#")
will map to /photos/1
if you pass in 1
in the first variadic parameter when you call execute(). You can have multiple variables, they will be mapped in order respectively.
Endpoint Specific Interceptors
Requirements
Installation
Cocoapods
pod 'Bridge', '0.4.3'
Carthage
github "rawrjustin/Bridge"
License
Bridge is licensed under MIT license.
Questions?
Open an issue