A pure Swift library that gives you access to the powerful Parse Server backend from your Swift applications.
For more information about the Parse Platform and its features, see the public documentation. The ParseSwift SDK is not a port of the Parse-SDK-iOS-OSX SDK and though some of it may feel familiar, it is not backwards compatible and is designed with a new philosophy. For more details visit the api documentation.
To learn how to use or experiment with ParseSwift, you can run and edit the ParseSwift.playground. You can use the parse-server in this repo which has docker compose files (docker-compose up
gives you a working server) configured to connect with the playground files, has Parse Dashboard, and can be used with mongoDB or PostgreSQL.
You can use The Swift Package Manager (SPM) to install ParseSwift by adding the following description to your Package.swift
file:
// swift-tools-version:5.1
import PackageDescription
let package = Package(
name: "YOUR_PROJECT_NAME",
dependencies: [
.package(url: "https://github.com/parse-community/Parse-Swift", from: "2.0.2"),
]
)
Then run swift build
.
You can also install using SPM in your Xcode project by going to "Project->NameOfYourProject->Swift Packages" and placing "https://github.com/parse-community/Parse-Swift.git" in the search field.
Add the following line to your Podfile:
pod 'ParseSwift'
Run pod install
, and you should now have the latest version from the main branch.
Add the following line to your Cartfile:
github "parse-community/Parse-Swift"
Run carthage update
, and you should now have the latest version of ParseSwift SDK in your Carthage folder.
After installing ParseSwift, to use it first import ParseSwift
in your AppDelegate.swift and then add the following code in your application:didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:
method:
ParseSwift.initialize(applicationId: "xxxxxxxxxx", clientKey: "xxxxxxxxxx", serverURL: URL(string: "https://example.com")!)
Please checkout the Swift Playground for more usage information.
Query
is one of the key concepts on the Parse Platform. It allows you to retrieve ParseObject
s by specifying some conditions, making it easy to build apps such as a dashboard, a todo list or even some strategy games. However, Query
is based on a pull model, which is not suitable for apps that need real-time support.
Suppose you are building an app that allows multiple users to edit the same file at the same time. Query
would not be an ideal tool since you can not know when to query from the server to get the updates.
To solve this problem, we introduce Parse LiveQuery. This tool allows you to subscribe to a Query
you are interested in. Once subscribed, the server will notify clients whenever a ParseObject
that matches the Query
is created or updated, in real-time.
Parse LiveQuery contains two parts, the LiveQuery server and the LiveQuery clients (this SDK). In order to use live queries, you need to at least setup the server.
The easiest way to setup the LiveQuery server is to make it run with the Open Source Parse Server.
The LiveQuery client interface is based around the concept of Subscription
s. You can register any Query
for live updates from the associated live query server and use the query as a view model for a SwiftUI view by simply using the subscribe
property of a query:
let myQuery = GameScore.query("score" > 9)
struct ContentView: View {
//: A LiveQuery subscription can be used as a view model in SwiftUI
@ObservedObject var subscription = myQuery.subscribe!
var body: some View {
VStack {
if subscription.subscribed != nil {
Text("Subscribed to query!")
} else if subscription.unsubscribed != nil {
Text("Unsubscribed from query!")
} else if let event = subscription.event {
//: This is how you register to receive notificaitons of events related to your LiveQuery.
switch event.event {
case .entered(let object):
Text("Entered with score: \(object.score)")
case .left(let object):
Text("Left with score: \(object.score)")
case .created(let object):
Text("Created with score: \(object.score)")
case .updated(let object):
Text("Updated with score: \(object.score)")
case .deleted(let object):
Text("Deleted with score: \(object.score)")
}
} else {
Text("Not subscribed to a query")
}
Spacer()
Text("Update GameScore in Parse Dashboard to see changes here")
Button(action: {
try? query.unsubscribe()
}, label: {
Text("Unsubscribe")
.font(.headline)
.background(Color.red)
.foregroundColor(.white)
.padding()
.cornerRadius(20.0)
.frame(width: 300, height: 50)
})
}
}
}
or by calling the subscribe(_ client: ParseLiveQuery)
method of a query. If you want to customize your view model more you can subclass Subscription
or add the subscription to your own view model. You can test out LiveQuery subscriptions in Swift Playgrounds.
You can also use asynchronous call backs to subscribe to a LiveQuery:
let myQuery = Message.query("from" == "parse")
guard let subscription = myQuery.subscribeCallback else {
print("Error subscribing...")
return
}
or by calling the subscribeCallback(_ client: ParseLiveQuery)
method of a query.
Where Message
is a ParseObject.
Once you've subscribed to a query, you can handle
events on them, like so:
subscription.handleSubscribe { subscribedQuery, isNew in
//Handle the subscription however you like.
if isNew {
print("Successfully subscribed to new query \(subscribedQuery)")
} else {
print("Successfully updated subscription to new query \(subscribedQuery)")
}
}
You can handle any event listed in the LiveQuery spec:
subscription.handleEvent { _, event in
// Called whenever an object was created
switch event {
case .entered(let object):
print("Entered: \(object)")
case .left(let object):
print("Left: \(object)")
case .created(let object):
print("Created: \(object)")
case .updated(let object):
print("Updated: \(object)")
case .deleted(let object):
print("Deleted: \(object)")
}
}
Similiarly, you can unsubscribe and register to be notified when it occurs:
subscription.handleUnsubscribe { query in
print("Unsubscribed from \(query)")
}
//: To unsubscribe from your query.
do {
try query.unsubscribe()
} catch {
print(error)
}
Handling errors is and other events is similar, take a look at the Subscription
class for more information. You can test out LiveQuery subscriptions in Swift Playgrounds.
You are not limited to a single Live Query Client - you can create multiple instances of ParseLiveQuery
, use certificate authentication and pinning, receive metrics about each client connection, connect to individual server URLs, and more.