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OK. Dwifft is a Swift library that does two things. The first thing sounds interesting but perhaps only abstractly useful, and the other thing is a very concretely useful thing based off the first thing.
The first thing (found in Dwifft.swift
) is an algorithm that solves the Longest Common Subsequence problem. Pragmatically, the problem of finding the difference between two arrays is trivially reducable to the LCS problem, i.e. if you can find the longest common subsequence between two arrays, you've also found a series of transforms to apply to array 1 that will result in array 2. This algorithm is written purely in Swift, and uses dynamic programming to achieve substantial performance improvements over a naïve approach (that being said, there are several ways it could probably be sped up.) Perhaps by now you've figured out that Dwifft is a terrible/brilliant portmanteau of "Swift" and "Diff". If this kind of thing is interesting to you, there's a pretty great paper on diffing algorithms: http://www.xmailserver.org/diff2.pdf
The second thing (found in Dwifft+UIKit.swift
) is a series of diff calculators for UITableView
s and UICollectionView
s. Let's say you have a UITableView
that's backed by a simple array of values (like a list of names, e.g. ["Alice", "Bob", "Carol"]
. If that array changes (maybe Bob leaves, and is replaced by Dave, so our list is now ["Alice, "Carol", "Dave"]
), we'll want to update the table. The easiest way to do this is by calling reloadData
on it. This has a couple of downsides: the transition isn't animated, and it'll cause your user to lose their scroll position if they've scrolled the table. The nicer way is to use the insertRowsAtIndexPaths:withRowAnimation
and deleteRowsAtIndexPaths:withRowAnimation
methods on UITableView
, but this requires you to figure out which index paths have changed in your array (in our example, you'd have to figure out that the row at index 1 should be removed, and a new row should be inserted at index 2 should then be added). If only we had a way to diff the previous value of our array with it's new value. Wait a minute.
When you wire up a TableViewDiffCalculator
to your UITableView
(or a CollectionViewDiffCalculator
to your UICollectionView
, it'll automatically calculate diffs and trigger the necessary animations on it whenever you change its rows
property. Neat, right? Usually, this rows
object will be the same thing you're using in your UITableViewDataSource
methods. The only constraint is that the items in that rows
array have to conform to Equatable
, because, you know, how else could you compare them?
This makes slightly more sense in code, so check out the tests (which show LCS
/Diff
in action) and the example app (which demonstrates the use of TableViewDiffCalculator
). You can quickly run the example with pod try Dwifft
.
Thanks for reading! PRs and such are of course welcome, but I want to keep this pretty tightly-scoped, so I'd politely request you open an issue before going off and implementing any new functionality so we can talk things over first.
Happy dwiffing!
Cocoapods or Carthage. You'll need to use cocoapods frameworks because Swift. Version 0.1 is written in Swift 1.2, versions 0.2-0.3.1 are Swift 2, beyond that is Swift 3.