Sourcery is a code generator for Swift language, built on top of Apple's own SourceKit. It extends the language abstractions to allow you to generate boilerplate code automatically.
It's used in over 8000 projects on both iOS and macOS and it powers some of the most popular and critically-acclaimed apps you have used. Its massive community adoption was one of the factors that pushed Apple to implement derived Equality and automatic Codable conformance. Sourcery is maintained by a growing community of contributors.
Try Sourcery for your next project or add it to an existing one -- you'll save a lot of time and be happy you did!
Sourcery allows you to get rid of repetitive tasks. An example might be implementing Equatable
, without Sourcery you need to implement stuff like this:
extension Person: Equatable {
static func ==(lhs: Person, rhs: Person) -> Bool {
guard lhs.firstName == rhs.firstName else { return false }
guard lhs.lastName == rhs.lastName else { return false }
guard lhs.birthDate == rhs.birthDate else { return false }
return true
}
}
This is trivial code but imagine doing this across ten types. Across fifty. How many structs and classes are in your project?
Sourcery removes the need to write this code. And if you refactor or add properties, the equality code will be automatically updated for you, eliminating possible human errors.
Sourcery automation can be applied to many more domains, e.g.
- Equality & Hashing
- Enum cases & Counts
- Lenses
- Mocks & Stubs
- LinuxMain
- Decorators
- JSON coding
- NSCoding and Codable
It's trivial to write new templates to remove boilerplate that is specific to your projects.
There are plenty of tutorials for different uses of Sourcery:
- The Magic of Sourcery is a great starting tutorial
- Generating Swift Code for iOS deals with JSON handling code
- How To Automate Swift Boilerplate with Sourcery generates conversions to dictionaries
- Codable Enums implements Codable support for Enumerations
- Building an API client with Sourcery builds API client leveraging Sourcery annotations
- Metaprogramming in Swift is a video from CocoaHeads where Krzysztof introduces Sourcery
-
Binary form
Download the latest release with the prebuilt binary from release tab. Unzip the archive into the desired destination and run
bin/sourcery
-
brew install sourcery
-
Add pod 'Sourcery' to your Podfile and run
pod update Sourcery
. This will download the latest release binary and will put it in your project's CocoaPods path so you will run it with$PODS_ROOT/Sourcery/bin/sourcery
-
Run
mint run krzysztofzablocki/Sourcery
.Note: Constraints of SPM (see below) apply.
-
Building from source
Download the latest release source code from the release tab or clone the repository and build Sourcery manually.
-
Building with Swift Package Manager
Run
swift build -c release
in the root folder. This will create a.build/release
folder and will put the binary there. Move the whole.build/release
folder to your desired destination and run withpath_to_release_folder/sourcery
Note: Swift and JS templates are not supported when building with SPM yet.
-
Building with Xcode
Open
Sourcery.xcworkspace
and build withSourcery-Release
scheme. This will createSourcery.app
in the Derived Data folder. You can copy it to your desired destination and run withpath_to_sourcery_app/Sourcery.app/Contents/MacOS/Sourcery
-
Full documentation for the latest release is available here.
Sourcery is a command line tool, you can either run it manually or in a custom build phase using the following command:
$ ./sourcery --sources <sources path> --templates <templates path> --output <output path>
Note: this command may be different depending on the way in which you installed Sourcery (see Installing)
--sources
- Path to a source swift files. You can provide multiple paths using multiple--sources
option.--templates
- Path to templates. File or Directory. You can provide multiple paths using multiple--templates
options.--force-parse
- File extensions of Sourcery generated file you want to parse. You can provide multiple extension using multiple--force-parse
options. (i.e.file.toparse.swift
will be parsed even if generated by Sourcery if--force-parse toparse
). Useful when trying to implement a multiple phases generation.--output
[default: current path] - Path to output. File or Directory.--config
[default: current path] - Path to config file. Directory. See Configuration file.--args
- Additional arguments to pass to templates. Each argument can have an explicit value or will have implicittrue
value. Arguments should be separated with,
without spaces (i.e.--args arg1=value,arg2
). Arguments are accessible in templates viaargument.name
--watch
[default: false] - Watch both code and template folders for changes and regenerate automatically.--verbose
[default: false] - Turn on verbose logging--quiet
[default: false] - Turn off any logging, only emit errors--disableCache
[default: false] - Turn off caching of parsed data--prune
[default: false] - Prune empty generated files--version
- Display the current version of Sourcery--help
- Display help information
Instead of CLI arguments you can use .sourcery.yml
configuration file, like this:
sources:
- <sources path>
- <sources path>
templates:
- <templates path>
- <templates path>
force-parse:
- <string value>
- <string value>
output:
<output path>
args:
<name>: <value>
Read more about configuration file here.
Contributions to Sourcery are welcomed and encouraged!
It is easy to get involved. Please see the Contributing guide for more details.
A list of contributors is available through GitHub.
To give clarity of what is expected of our community, Sourcery has adopted the code of conduct defined by the Contributor Covenant. This document is used across many open source communities, and I think it articulates my values well. For more, see the Code of Conduct.
Sourcery is available under the MIT license. See LICENSE for more information.
This tool is powered by
- SourceKitten by JP Simard
- Stencil and few other libs by Kyle Fuller
Thank you! for:
- Mariusz Ostrowski for creating the logo.
- Artsy Eidolon team, because we use their codebase as a stub data for performance testing the parser.
- Olivier Halligon for showing me his setup scripts for CLI tools which are powering our rakefile.
If you want to generate code for asset related data like .xib, .storyboards etc. use SwiftGen. SwiftGen and Sourcery are complementary tools.
Make sure to check my other libraries and tools, especially:
- KZPlayground - Powerful playgrounds for Swift and Objective-C
- KZFileWatchers - Daemon for observing local and remote file changes, used for building other developer tools (Sourcery uses it)
You can follow me on Twitter for news/updates about other projects I am creating.