/Unbox

The easy to use Swift JSON decoder

Primary LanguageSwiftMIT LicenseMIT

Unbox

Travis CocoaPods Carthage

Unbox is an easy to use Swift JSON decoder. Don't spend hours writing JSON decoding code - just unbox it instead!

Unbox is lightweight, non-magical and doesn't require you to subclass, make your JSON conform to a specific schema or completely change the way you write model code. It can be used on any model with ease.

Basic example

Say you have your usual-suspect User model:

struct User {
    let name: String
    let age: Int
}

That can be initialized with the following JSON:

{
    "name": "John",
    "age": 27
}

To decode this JSON into a User instance, all you have to do is make User conform to Unboxable and unbox its properties:

struct User: Unboxable {
    let name: String
    let age: Int

    init(unboxer: Unboxer) {
        self.name = unboxer.unbox("name")
        self.age = unboxer.unbox("age")
    }
}

Unbox automatically (or, actually, Swift does) figures out what types your properties are, and decodes them accordingly. Now, we can decode a User like this:

let user: User = try Unbox(dictionary)

or even:

let user: User = try Unbox(data)

Advanced example

The first was a pretty simple example, but Unbox can decode even the most complicated JSON structures for you, with both required and optional values, all without any extra code on your part:

struct SpaceShip: Unboxable {
    let type: SpaceShipType
    let weight: Double
    let engine: Engine
    let passengers: [Astronaut]
    let launchLiveStreamURL: NSURL?
    let lastPilot: Astronaut?
    let lastLaunchDate: NSDate?

    init(unboxer: Unboxer) {
        self.type = unboxer.unbox("type")
        self.weight = unboxer.unbox("weight")
        self.engine = unboxer.unbox("engine")
        self.passengers = unboxer.unbox("passengers")
        self.launchLiveStreamURL = unboxer.unbox("liveStreamURL")
        self.lastPilot = unboxer.unbox("lastPilot")

        let dateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
        dateFormatter.dateFormat = "YYYY-MM-dd"
        self.lastLaunchDate = unboxer.unbox("lastLaunchDate", formatter: dateFormatter)
    }
}

enum SpaceShipType: Int, UnboxableEnum {
    case Apollo
    case Sputnik

    static func unboxFallbackValue() -> SpaceShipType {
        return .Apollo
    }
}

struct Engine: Unboxable {
    let manufacturer: String
    let fuelConsumption: Float

    init(unboxer: Unboxer) {
        self.manufacturer = unboxer.unbox("manufacturer")
        self.fuelConsumption = unboxer.unbox("fuelConsumption")
    }
}

struct Astronaut: Unboxable {
    let name: String

    init(unboxer: Unboxer) {
        self.name = unboxer.unbox("name")
    }
}

Error handling

Decoding JSON is inherently a failable operation. The JSON might be in an unexpected format, or a required value might be missing. Thankfully, Unbox provides several ways to trigger and handle errors during the unboxing process.

What all these techniques share is that you never have to manually exit out of an initializer (which in Swift requires you to assign default values to all stored properites, generating a lot of unwanted boilerplate).

Instead, if an error occurs, the currently used Unboxer is marked as failed, which in turn will cause the Unbox() function call that triggered the unboxing process to throw an UnboxError.

Missing or invalid required properties

If a non-optional property couldn’t be unboxed, this will automatically cause the current Unboxer to be marked as failed.

Manually failing an Unboxer

You can also perform custom validation inside of an initializer, and in case you want to abort the unboxing process, simply call unboxer.failForKey() or unboxer.failForInvalidValue(forKey:).

Supported types

Unbox supports decoding all standard JSON types, like:

  • Bool
  • Int, Double, Float
  • String
  • Array
  • Dictionary

It also supports Arrays and Dictionaries that contain nested unboxable types, as you can see in the Advanced example above (where an array of the unboxable Astronaut struct is being unboxed).

Finally, it also supports NSURL through the use of a transformer, and NSDate by using any NSDateFormatter.

Transformations

Unbox also supports transformations that let you treat any value or object as if it was a raw JSON type.

It ships with a default String -> NSURL transformation, which lets you unbox any NSURL property from a string describing an URL without writing any transformation code.

The same is also true for String -> Int, Double, Float, CGFloat transformations. If you’re unboxing a number type and a string was found, that string will automatically be converted to that number type (if possible).

To enable your own types to be unboxable using a transformation, all you have to do is make your type conform to UnboxableByTransform and implement its protocol methods.

Here’s an example that makes a native Swift UniqueIdentifier type unboxable using a transformation:

struct UniqueIdentifier: UnboxableByTransform {
    typealias UnboxRawValueType = String

    let identifierString: String

    init?(identifierString: String) {
        if let UUID = NSUUID(UUIDString: identifierString) {
            self.identifierString = UUID.UUIDString
        } else {
            return nil
        }
    }

    init() {
        self.identifierString = NSUUID().UUIDString
    }

    static func transformUnboxedValue(unboxedValue: String) -> UniqueIdentifier? {
        return UniqueIdentifier(identifierString: unboxedValue)
    }

    static func unboxFallbackValue() -> UniqueIdentifier {
        return UniqueIdentifier()
    }
}

Supports JSON with both Array and Dictionary root objects

No matter if the root object of the JSON that you want to unbox is an Array or Dictionary - you can use the same Unbox() function and Unbox will return either a single model or an array of models (based on type inference).

Built-in enum support

You can also unbox enums directly, without having to handle the case if they failed to initialize. All you have to do is make any enum type you wish to unbox conform to UnboxableEnum, like this:

enum Profession: Int, UnboxableEnum {
    case Developer
    case Astronaut

    static func unboxFallbackValue() {
        return .Developer
    }
}

Now Profession can be unboxed directly in any model

struct Passenger: Unboxable {
    let profession: Profession

    init(unboxer: Unboxer) {
        self.profession = unboxer.unbox("profession")
    }
}

Contextual objects

Sometimes you need to use data other than what's contained in a dictionary during the decoding process. For this, Unbox has support for contextual objects that can be made available on the Unboxer that is being used.

To pass a contextual object, use the Unbox(dictionary:context:) overload when you start the unboxing process.

The Unboxer passed to your Unboxable's init method will then make your contextual object available through its context property.

You can also require that a contextual object is present during the unboxing process by using the UnboxableWithContext protocol. Types that conform to this protocol can then be unboxed using Unbox(dictionary:context:), where context must be of the type’s defined ContextType.

Key path support

You can also use key paths (for both dictionary keys and array indexes) to unbox values from nested JSON structures. Let's expand our User model:

{
    "name": "John",
    "age": 27,
    "activities": {
        "running": {
            "distance": 300
        }
    },
    "devices": [
        "Macbook Pro",
        "iPhone",
        "iPad"
    ]
}
struct User: Unboxable {
    let name: String
    let age: Int
    let runningDistance: Int
    let primaryDeviceName: String

    init(unboxer: Unboxer) {
        self.name = unboxer.unbox("name")
        self.age = unboxer.unbox("age")
        self.runningDistance = unboxer.unbox("activities.running.distance", isKeyPath: true)
        self.primaryDeviceName = unboxer.unbox("devices.0", isKeyPath: true)
    }
}

Custom unboxing

Sometimes you need more fine grained control over the decoding process, and even though Unbox was designed for simplicity, it also features a powerful custom unboxing API that enables you to take control of how an object gets unboxed. This comes very much in handy when using Unbox together with Core Data, when using dependency injection, or when aggregating data from multiple sources. Here's an example:

let dependency = DependencyManager.loadDependency()

let model: Model = try Unboxer.performCustomUnboxingWithDictionary(dictionary, closure: {
    let unboxer = $0

    var model = Model(dependency: dependency)
    model.name = unboxer.unbox("name")
    model.count = unboxer.unbox("count")

    return model
})

Installation

CocoaPods:

Add the line pod "Unbox" to your Podfile

Carthage:

Add the line github "johnsundell/unbox" to your Cartfile

Manual:

Clone the repo and drag the file Unbox.swift into your Xcode project.

Swift Package Manager:

Add the line .Package(url: "https://github.com/johnsundell/unbox.git", majorVersion: 1) to your Package.swift

Platform support

Unbox supports all current Apple platforms with the following minimum versions:

  • iOS 8
  • OS X 10.11
  • watchOS 2
  • tvOS 9

Debugging tips

In case your unboxing code isn’t working like you expect it to, here are some tips on how to debug it:

Compile time error: Ambiguous reference to member 'unbox'

Swift cannot find the appropriate overload of the unbox method to call. Make sure you have conformed to any required protocol (such as Unboxable, UnboxableEnum, etc). Note that you can only conform to one Unbox protocol for each type (that is, a type cannot be both an UnboxableEnum and UnboxableByTransform). Also remember that you can only reference concrete types (not Protocol types) in order for Swift to be able to select what overload to use.

Unbox() throws

Either set a breakpoint in Unboxer.failForInvalidValue(forKey:) to see what key/value combination that caused the unboxing process to fail, or catch an UnboxError in the catch block when calling try Unbox().

If you need any help in resolving any problems that you might encounter while using Unbox, feel free to open an Issue.

Hope you enjoy unboxing your JSON!

For more updates on Unbox, and my other open source projects, follow me on Twitter: @johnsundell