Skip to content
/ JSEN Public

JSEN (JSON Swift Enum Notation) is a lightweight enum representation of a JSON, written in Swift.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

rogerluan/JSEN

Repository files navigation

JSEN

GitHub Action Build Status Swift 5.4 Supports iOS, macOS, tvOS, watchOS and Ubuntu Latest release

/ˈdʒeɪsən/ JAY-sən

JSEN (JSON Swift Enum Notation) is a lightweight enum representation of a JSON, written in Swift.

A JSON, as defined in the ECMA-404 standard, can be:

  • A number
  • A boolean
  • A string
  • Null
  • An array of those things
  • A dictionary of those things

Thus, JSONs can be represented as a recursive enum (or indirect enum, in Swift), effectively creating a statically-typed JSON payload in Swift.

Why would I use this?

This is the type safe version of the infamous [String:Any] that is present everywhere in your codebase, to represent JSONs. If you love Swift, this should be enough of an argument already 😉 If not, keep reading to discover all the syntactic sugar present in this simple enum!

Installation

Using Swift Package Manager:

dependencies: [
    .package(name: "JSEN", url: "https://github.com/rogerluan/JSEN", .upToNextMajor(from: "1.0.0")),
]

Usage

I think it's essential for the understanding of how simple this is, for you to visualize the JSEN declaration:

/// A simple JSON value representation using enum cases.
public enum JSEN : Equatable {
    /// An integer value.
    case int(Int)
    /// A floating point value.
    case double(Double)
    /// A string value.
    case string(String)
    /// A boolean value.
    case bool(Bool)
    /// An array value in which all elements are also JSEN values.
    indirect case array([JSEN])
    /// An object value, also known as dictionary, hash, and map.
    /// All values of this object are also JSEN values.
    indirect case dictionary([String:JSEN])
    /// A null value.
    case null
}

That's it.

ExpressibleBy…Literal

Now that you're familiar with JSEN, it provides a few syntactic sugary utilities, such as conformance to most ExpressibleBy…Literal protocols:

  • ExpressibleByIntegerLiteral initializer returns an .int(…).
  • ExpressibleByFloatLiteral initializer returns a .double(…).
  • ExpressibleByStringLiteral initializer returns a .string(…).
  • ExpressibleByBooleanLiteral initializer returns a .bool(…).
  • ExpressibleByArrayLiteral initializer returns an .array(…) as long as its Elements are JSENs.
  • ExpressibleByDictionaryLiteral initializer returns an .dictionary(…) as long as its keys are Strings and Values JSENs.
  • ExpressibleByNilLiteral initializer returns a .null.

Conformance to ExpressibleBy…Literal protocols are great when you want to build a JSON structure like this:

let request: [String:JSEN] = [
    "key": "value",
    "another_key": 42,
]

But what if you're not working with literals?

let request: [String:JSEN] = [
    "amount": normalizedAmount // This won't compile
]

Enters the…

% Prefix Operator

let request: [String:JSEN] = [
    "amount": %normalizedAmount // This works!
]

The custom % prefix operator transforms any Int, Double, String, Bool, [JSEN] and [String:JSEN] values into its respective JSEN value.

By design, no support was added to transform Optional into a .null to prevent misuse.

Click here to expand the reason why it could lead to mistakes

To illustrate the possible problems around an %optionalValue operation, picture the following scenario:

let request: [String:JSEN] = [
    "middle_name": %optionalString
]
network.post(path: "user", parameters: request)
network.put(path: "user", parameters: request)
network.patch(path: "user", parameters: request)
network.mergePatch(path: "user", parameters: request)

In the scenarios above, what do you think should be the RESTful expected behavior?

If the % operator detected a nonnull String, great. But if it detected its underlying value to be .none (aka nil), it would convert the value to .null, which, when encoded, would be converted to NSNull() (more on this below in the Codable section). As you imagine, NSNull() and nil have very different behaviors when it comes to RESTful APIs - the former might delete the key information on the database, while the latter will simply be ignored by Swift Dictionary (as if the field wasn't even there).

Hence, if you want to use an optional value, make the call explicit by using either .null if you know the value must be encoded into a NSNull() instance, or unwrap its value and wrap it around one of the non-null JSEN cases.

Conformance to Codable

Of course! We couldn't miss this. JSEN has native support to Encodable & Decodable (aka Codable), so you can easily parse JSEN to/from JSON-like structures. Each case is mapped to its respective value type, and .null maps to a NSNull() instance (which, in a JSON, is represented by null).

One additional utility was added as well, which's the decode(as:) function. It receives a Decodable-conformant Type as parameter and will attempt to decode the JSEN value into the given type using a two-pass strategy:

  • First, it encodes the JSEN to Data, and attempts to decode that Data into the given type.
  • If that fails and the JSEN is a .string(…) case, it attempts to encode the JSEN's string using .utf8. If it is able to encode it, it attempts to decode the resulting Data into the given type.

Subscript Using KeyPath

Last, but not least, comes the KeyPath subscript.

Based on @olebegemann's article, KeyPath is a simple struct used to represent multiple segments of a string. It is initializable by a string literal such as "this.is.a.keypath" and, when initialized, the string gets separated by periods, which compounds the struct's segments.

The subscript to JSEN allows the following syntax:

let request: [String:JSEN] = [
    "1st": [
        "2nd": [
            "3rd": "Hello!"
        ]
    ]
]
print(request[keyPath: "1st.2nd.3rd"]) // "Hello!"

Without this syntax, you'd have to create multiple chains of awkward optionals and unwrap them in weird and verbosy ways to access a nested value in a dictionary. I'm not a fan of doing that :)

Contributions

If you spot something wrong, missing, or if you'd like to propose improvements to this project, please open an Issue or a Pull Request with your ideas and I promise to get back to you within 24 hours! 😇

References

JSEN was heavily based on Statically-typed JSON payload in Swift and other various implementations of this same utility spread throughout Stack Overflow and Swift Forums. I brought everything I needed together in this project because I couldn't find something similar as a Swift Package that had everything I needed.

License

This project is open source and covered by a standard 2-clause BSD license. That means you can use (publicly, commercially and privately), modify and distribute this project's content, as long as you mention Roger Oba as the original author of this code and reproduce the LICENSE text inside your app, repository, project or research paper.

Explore my other tools

Statused Social Banner

Forget about 'When did release v2.1.3 go live again?' and 'Is the app ready to be tested yet?'

Statused monitors App Store Connect and send you notifications directly on Slack.

Learn more: statused.com

Contact

Twitter: @rogerluan_

About

JSEN (JSON Swift Enum Notation) is a lightweight enum representation of a JSON, written in Swift.

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages