Reputation: 2386
I'm using Alamofire
and am parsing the returned JSON into an object as shown below:
final class User: NSObject, ResponseObjectSerializable {
var id: Int
var facebookUID: String?
var email: String
var firstName: String
var lastName: String
var phone: String?
var position: String?
var timeCreated: CVDate
init?(response: NSHTTPURLResponse, var representation: AnyObject) {
if let dataRepresentation = ((representation as! NSDictionary).valueForKey("data") as? [String: AnyObject]) {
representation = dataRepresentation
}
if let id = representation.valueForKeyPath("id") as? Int {
self.id = id
} else {
self.id = 0
}
if let facebookUID = representation.valueForKeyPath("facebook_UID") as? String {
self.facebookUID = facebookUID
}
if let email = representation.valueForKeyPath("email") as? String {
self.email = email
} else {
self.email = ""
}
if let firstName = representation.valueForKeyPath("first_name") as? String {
self.firstName = firstName
} else {
self.firstName = ""
}
if let lastName = representation.valueForKeyPath("last_name") as? String {
self.lastName = lastName
} else {
self.lastName = ""
}
if let phone = representation.valueForKeyPath("phone") as? String {
self.phone = phone
}
if let position = representation.valueForKeyPath("position_name") as? String {
self.position = position
}
if let timeCreated = representation.valueForKeyPath("time_created") as? String {
let formatter = NSDateFormatter()
formatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"
if let date = formatter.dateFromString(timeCreated) {
self.timeCreated = CVDate(date: date)
} else {
self.timeCreated = CVDate(date: NSDate())
}
} else {
self.timeCreated = CVDate(date: NSDate())
}
}
}
My question is, is this style the best way to decode JSON and set the non-optional instance variables? For example, in this statement:
if let id = representation.valueForKeyPath("id") as? Int {
self.id = id
}
I am required by the compiler to add an else clause and set the id
to something otherwise xCode throws an error saying: self.id is not initialized at implicitly generated super.init call
.
But at the same time, intializing self.id
with a value of 0
is wrong and doesn't help me at all.
Upvotes: 0
Views: 315
Reputation: 82
To address your concern about not having an ID being an error condition, you could use a failable initializer. I did that in a recent project. Looks something like this:
let id: Int!
init? (inputJson: NSDictionary) {
if let id = inputJson["id"] as? Int {
self.id = id
} else {
// if we are initing from JSON, there MUST be an id
id = nil
cry(inputJson) // this logs the error
return nil
}
}
Of course, this means your code will need to accept that the initialization of your entire object may fail ..
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 70098
But at the same time, intializing self.id with a value of 0 is wrong and doesn't help me at all.
If having a default value for self.id
feels wrong, then you should make this property an Optional. That way you wouldn't have to add an else clause:
final class User: NSObject, ResponseObjectSerializable {
var id: Int?
var facebookUID: String?
var email: String
var firstName: String
var lastName: String
var phone: String?
var position: String?
var timeCreated: CVDate
init?(response: NSHTTPURLResponse, var representation: AnyObject) {
if let dataRepresentation = ((representation as! NSDictionary).valueForKey("data") as? [String: AnyObject]) {
representation = dataRepresentation
}
if let id = representation.valueForKeyPath("id") as? Int {
self.id = id
}
...
Update
You said in the comments:
I always need to have an id for the user object though.
If you have to have this id
property then the question is moot, you just have to do
let id = representation.valueForKeyPath("id") as! Int
and guarantee earlier that this value will exist.
Because if your object needs an ID, then you can't initialize it anyway if this value doesn't exist and if you don't want a default value.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 12770
While the ResponseObjectSerializable
code is a great example from the Alamofire project, it's really a better idea to use a dedicated JSON parsing library that has actual error states. This is far better than using optionals to represent error states, or having to provide a default value for every field just in case the response isn't correctly formed.
Although it has a bit of learning curve, I prefer to use Argo for my JSON parsing. Once you get the hang of it it makes JSON parsing practically bulletproof. Better yet, it's easy to integrate with Alamofire, especially version 3 that was released today.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 479
You could use ?? to provide default values like this:
self.id = (representation.valueForKeyPath("id") as? Int) ?? 0
Upvotes: 1