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ParksAndRecreation

Various Swift and SwiftUI tidbits, for fun and for profit.

Swift

Base classes for tracking work inside OperationQueue that takes place outside of the queue, without causing a thread to hang by waiting. Includes an Operation for wrapping URLSessionTask.

Inspired by and lovingly nerd-sniped by @jaredsinclair.

A simple class for using Unicode to encircle some characters or single-digit numbers in the iOS system font, inspired by this tweet. Includes a gallery live view for demonstration.

Badge gallery

Derived from @krzyzanowskim's blog post: use a protocol extension to split any collection into a group of slices. Think flatten(), but in reverse.

A thought exercise strongly inspired by @khanlou (blog post here) and @pointfreeco for a more protocol-oriented, composable parsing flavored like Swift Combine.

Use TextKit to perform custom truncation with high performance. Also an example of creating building a drop-in UILabel backed by TextKit.

Use DispatchSource to coalesce calls that shouldn't be called more than once per runloop iteration, like UI reconfiguration.

A fast recursive-descent parser for CSVs and similarly structured data inspired by Matt Gallagher.

Based on a technique used in the iOS 10 Music app, subclasses of UICollectionView and UITableView that derive their intrinsic content size and visible bounds from their content and context, respectively, when isScrollEnabled = false. This is similar to behavior on UITextView. It enables, for instance, putting three collection views in a stack view in a scroll view with low performance impact.

Mathematical operators and idiomatic bridging for Core Graphics types.

Extremely simple read-only HTML parser based on libxml2 with 100% test coverage.

An extension on UIViewController providing a keyboardLayoutGuide property. The layout guide normally mirrors the safe area, but automatically shrinks to avoid the keyboard. It also allows emulating the automatic content keyboard insets applied to UICollectionViewController and UITableViewController. It avoids the pitfalls of most keyboard avoidance implementations, like correctly syncing animations.

The Swift 3 version requires iOS 9.0.

Create your own sun-, time-, or light/dark-based wallpaper for macOS Mojave.

Wallpaper changing from light to dark

Playground requires Swift 4.2 beta and macOS Mojave.

Formatted localization using Swift string formatting. Introduces localize with a similar prototype to NSLocalizedString:

func localize(text: LocalizableText, tableName: String? = default, bundle: NSBundle = default, value: String = default, comment: String)

What's a LocalizableText? It's an intermediary type that deconstructs interpolation segments for use with string formatting. But that's not important, what's important is that it's literal convertible:

let filesLeft = 4
let filesTotal = 5
let labelText = localize("test-progress-\(filesLeft)-of-\(filesTotal)", comment: "Help text used for a positional description")

And in your Localizable.strings, just like in Cocoa:

/* Help text used for a positional description */
"test-progress-%@-of-%@" = "%1$@ of %2$@ remaining.";

All placeholders should be %@ on the end of the key, and be represented positionally, i.e., with %1$@, %2$@, and so on.

A helper for performing type-safe multicast callbacks. The result is a lot like using UIControl, but for weakly held objects and without unsafe selectors.

Heavily inspired by this blog post from @ole.

Extending NSView Auto Layout with conveniences from iOS, including a view-level version of NSWindow.contentLayoutGuide (think of it like you would safe areas), directionalLayoutMargins, layoutMarginsGuide, and readableContentGuide.

Layout margins

A simple glueing-together of Dictionary and Array into an ordered, hashed data structure. Useful if your keys are indeed already Hashable, but doesn't have great performance; insertion and removal tend towards the worst of both structures. If you have any alternative, prefer something B-Tree based instead.

"Size classes are fine, but I can't customize them!" Yeah, you can! By inspecting what Mobile Safari does, you can do the same, using override trait collections.

Emulating the calculation of UIView.readableContentGuide.

Approximating multi-line large titles in navigation bars seen in News, Music, etc.

Badge gallery

Simple Swift bridging for NSRegularExpression, as well as general patterns to go from String.UTF16View and Range<String.UTF16Index> to NSString and NSRange.

A Swift 5 implementation of the UUID version 5 algorithm, which is based on a SHA-1 hash of some input data. These can be useful as database primary keys identifying some model that has no identifier of its own. Like all UUIDs, version 5 hashed UUIDs still have an astronomically low chance of collision.

Line, paragraph, sentence, and word views for Swift.String, providing a more idiomatic take on StringProtocol.getLineStart(_:end:contentsEnd:for:) and StringProtocol.getParagraphStart(_:end:contentsEnd:for:) as Swift collections.

Array(string.lines) // -> [Substring]

Experiment adding an accessory to UITabBarController, like Now Playing in Music.​app.

Tab bar palette gallery

  • Drop-in UITabBarController with a paletteViewController property
  • Palette is forwarded appearance (i.e., viewWillAppear) and trait collection events
  • Palette supports sizing through Auto Layout and preferredContentSize and animating changes to those
  • Can animate in, out, and between palette changes
  • Detects and supports highlighting of palette background on tap
  • Supports Interface Builder, 3D Touch, and modal view controllers

Spawn and join with a pthread_t returning a result from a Swift function, inspired by the Swift stdlib. See also Thread.init(block:) from iOS 10 and up.

Conveniences for using Core Graphics types in UI programming, such as retina-friendly rounding and equation operators that account for floating point inaccuracy.

Showing off the simple power of Swift iterators by performing breadth-first travel through the trees created by UIView, UIViewController, and CALayer.

SwiftUI

Hiding and unhiding the top and bottoms bars of on scroll to match the various onboarding UIs in iOS (Settings, Apple Pay, Health, etc.)

Similar to Receding Navigation Title in UIKit.

Archive

Obsoleted in Swift 4

If you're hurting for Objective-C's MyClassType<SomeProtocolType> *, try this on for size.

Obsoleted in Swift 4 by MyClass & SomeProtocol syntax.

A simple bridge to bridges concrete value types into NSCoding.

Obsoleted in Swift 4 by Codable.

Obsoleted in Swift 3

Use protocol extension to achieve simpler Core Data, like MyManagedObject(context:).

An idiomatic Data<T>, representing any buffer (contiguous or discontiguous) of numeric elements. Part NSData, part dispatch_data_t, Data is useful for low-level byte-based APIs in Swift, such as crypto and string parsing.

Create one with an array:

let data = Data<UInt8>(array: [ 0x48, 0x65, 0x6c, 0x6c, 0x6f, 0x2c, 0x20, 0x57, 0x6f, 0x72, 0x6c, 0x64, 0x21 ])

And enumerate through it in constant time:

for byte in data {
	...
}

Made with lots of help from @a2.

Even though it's been fixed in 2.1, Swift 2.0 has a rather ugly bug with wrapped dispatch_block_t types. Fix it with a C few tricks and a rational DispatchBlock type.

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Various Swift playgrounds, for fun and for profit.

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