Encoder & Decoder for XML using Swift's Codable protocols.
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This package is a fork of the original ShawnMoore/XMLParsing with more features and improved test coverage. Automatically generated documentation is available on our GitHub Pages.
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import XMLCoder import Foundation let sourceXML = """ <note> <to>Bob</to> <from>Jane</from> <heading>Reminder</heading> <body>Don't forget to use XMLCoder!</body> </note> """ struct Note: Codable { let to: String let from: String let heading: String let body: String } let note = try! XMLDecoder().decode(Note.self, from: Data(sourceXML.utf8)) let encodedXML = try! XMLEncoder().encode(note, withRootKey: "note")
The following features are available in 0.4.0 release or later (unless stated otherwise):
Sometimes you need to handle an XML namespace prefix, like in the XML below:
<h:table xmlns:h="http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/"> <h:tr> <h:td>Apples</h:td> <h:td>Bananas</h:td> </h:tr> </h:table>
Stripping the prefix from element names is enabled with
shouldProcessNamespaces property:
struct Table: Codable, Equatable { struct TR: Codable, Equatable { let td: [String] } let tr: [TR] } let decoder = XMLDecoder() // Setting this property to `true` for the namespace prefix to be stripped // during decoding so that key names could match. decoder.shouldProcessNamespaces = true let decoded = try decoder.decode(Table.self, from: xmlData)
XMLCoder provides two helper protocols that allow you to customize whether nodes
are encoded and decoded as attributes or elements: DynamicNodeEncoding and
DynamicNodeDecoding.
The declarations of the protocols are very simple:
protocol DynamicNodeEncoding: Encodable { static func nodeEncoding(for key: CodingKey) -> XMLEncoder.NodeEncoding } protocol DynamicNodeDecoding: Decodable { static func nodeDecoding(for key: CodingKey) -> XMLDecoder.NodeDecoding }
The values returned by corresponding static functions look like this:
enum NodeDecoding { // decodes a value from an attribute case attribute // decodes a value from an element case element // the default, attempts to decode as an element first, // otherwise reads from an attribute case elementOrAttribute } enum NodeEncoding { // encodes a value in an attribute case attribute // the default, encodes a value in an element case element // encodes a value in both attribute and element case both }
Add conformance to an appropriate protocol for types you'd like to customize. Accordingly, this example code:
struct Book: Codable, Equatable, DynamicNodeEncoding { let id: UInt let title: String let categories: [Category] enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case id case title case categories = "category" } static func nodeEncoding(for key: CodingKey) -> XMLEncoder.NodeEncoding { switch key { case Book.CodingKeys.id: return .both default: return .element } } }
works for this XML:
<book id="123"> <id>123</id> <title>Cat in the Hat</title> <category>Kids</category> <category>Wildlife</category> </book>
Please refer to PR #70 by @JoeMatt for more details.
Suppose that you need to decode an XML that looks similar to this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <foo id="123">456</foo>
By default you'd be able to decode foo as an element, but then it's not
possible to decode the id attribute. XMLCoder handles certain CodingKey
values in a special way to allow proper coding for this XML. Just add a coding
key with stringValue that equals "" (empty string). What
follows is an example type declaration that encodes the XML above, but special
handling of coding keys with those values works for both encoding and decoding.
struct Foo: Codable, DynamicNodeEncoding { let id: String let value: String enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case id case value = "" } static func nodeEncoding(forKey key: CodingKey) -> XMLEncoder.NodeEncoding { switch key { case CodingKeys.id: return .attribute default: return .element } } }
Thanks to @JoeMatt for implementing this in in PR #73.
By default whitespaces are trimmed in element content during decoding. This
includes string values decoded with value intrinsic keys.
Starting with version 0.5
you can now set a property trimValueWhitespaces to false (the default value is true) on
XMLDecoder instance to preserve all whitespaces in decoded strings.
When decoding pretty-printed XML while trimValueWhitespaces is set to false, it's possible
for whitespace elements to be added as child elements on an instance of XMLCoderElement. These
whitespace elements make it impossible to decode data structures that require custom Decodable logic.
Starting with version 0.13.0 you can
set a property removeWhitespaceElements to true (the default value is false) on
XMLDecoder to remove these whitespace elements.
Starting with version 0.8,
you can encode and decode enums with associated values by conforming your
CodingKey type additionally to XMLChoiceCodingKey. This allows encoding
and decoding XML elements similar in structure to this example:
<container> <int>1</int> <string>two</string> <string>three</string> <int>4</int> <int>5</int> </container>
To decode these elements you can use this type:
enum IntOrString: Codable { case int(Int) case string(String) enum CodingKeys: String, XMLChoiceCodingKey { case int case string } enum IntCodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case _0 = "" } enum StringCodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case _0 = "" } }
This is described in more details in PR #119 by @jsbean and @bwetherfield.
Lets extend previous example replacing simple types with complex in assosiated values. This example would cover XML like:
<container> <nested attr="n1_a1"> <val>n1_v1</val> <labeled> <val>n2_val</val> </labeled> </nested> <simple attr="n1_a1"> <val>n1_v1</val> </simple> </container>
enum InlineChoice: Equatable, Codable { case simple(Nested1) case nested(Nested1, labeled: Nested2) enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey, XMLChoiceCodingKey { case simple, nested } enum SimpleCodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case _0 = "" } enum NestedCodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case _0 = "" case labeled } struct Nested1: Equatable, Codable, DynamicNodeEncoding { var attr = "n1_a1" var val = "n1_v1" public static func nodeEncoding(for key: CodingKey) -> XMLEncoder.NodeEncoding { switch key { case CodingKeys.attr: return .attribute default: return .element } } } struct Nested2: Equatable, Codable { var val = "n2_val" } }
Integrating with Combine
Starting with XMLCoder version 0.9,
when Apple's Combine framework is available, XMLDecoder conforms to the
TopLevelDecoder protocol, which allows it to be used with the
decode(type:decoder:) operator:
import Combine import Foundation import XMLCoder func fetchBook(from url: URL) -> AnyPublisher<Book, Error> { return URLSession.shared.dataTaskPublisher(for: url) .map(\.data) .decode(type: Book.self, decoder: XMLDecoder()) .eraseToAnyPublisher() }
This was implemented in PR #132 by @sharplet.
Additionally, starting with XMLCoder
0.11 XMLEncoder
conforms to the TopLevelEncoder protocol:
import Combine import XMLCoder func encode(book: Book) -> AnyPublisher<Data, Error> { return Just(book) .encode(encoder: XMLEncoder()) .eraseToAnyPublisher() }
The resulting XML in the example above will start with <book, to customize
capitalization of the root element (e.g. <Book) you'll need to set an
appropriate keyEncoding strategy on the encoder. To change the element name
altogether you'll have to change the name of the type, which is an unfortunate
limitation of the TopLevelEncoder API.
Sometimes you need to set attributes on the root element, which aren't
directly related to your model type. Starting with XMLCoder
0.11 the encode
function on XMLEncoder accepts a new rootAttributes argument to help with
this:
struct Policy: Encodable { var name: String } let encoder = XMLEncoder() let data = try encoder.encode(Policy(name: "test"), rootAttributes: [ "xmlns": "http://www.nrf-arts.org/IXRetail/namespace", "xmlns:xsd": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema", "xmlns:xsi": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance", ])
The resulting XML will look like this:
<policy xmlns="http://www.nrf-arts.org/IXRetail/namespace" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"> <name>test</name> </policy>
This was implemented in PR #160 by @portellaa.
If your version of Swift allows property wrappers to be used, you may prefer this API to the more verbose dynamic node coding.
For example, this type
struct Book: Codable { @Element var id: Int }
will encode value Book(id: 42) as <Book><id>42</id></Book>. And vice versa,
it will decode the latter into the former.
Similarly,
struct Book: Codable { @Attribute var id: Int }
will encode value Book(id: 42) as <Book id="42"></Book> and vice versa for decoding.
If you don't know upfront if a property will be present as an element or an attribute during decoding,
use @ElementAndAttribute:
struct Book: Codable { @ElementAndAttribute var id: Int }
This will encode value Book(id: 42) as <Book id="42"><id>42</id></Book>. It will decode both
<Book><id>42</id></Book> and <Book id="42"></Book> as Book(id: 42).
This feature is available starting with XMLCoder 0.13.0 and was implemented by @bwetherfield.
You can add an XML header and/or doctype when encoding an object by supplying it to the encode function.
These arguments are both optional, and will only render when explicitly provided.
struct User: Codable { @Element var username: String } let data = try encoder.encode( User(username: "Joanis"), withRootKey: "user", header: XMLHeader(version: 1.0, encoding: "UTF-8"), doctype: .system( rootElement: "user", dtdLocation: "http://example.com/myUser_v1.dtd" ) )
Apple Platforms
- Xcode 11.0 or later
- IMPORTANT: compiling XMLCoder with Xcode 11.2.0 (11B52) and 11.2.1 (11B500) is not recommended due to crashes with
EXC_BAD_ACCESScaused by a compiler bug, please use Xcode 11.3 or later instead. Please refer to #150 for more details.
- IMPORTANT: compiling XMLCoder with Xcode 11.2.0 (11B52) and 11.2.1 (11B500) is not recommended due to crashes with
- Swift 5.1 or later
- iOS 9.0 / watchOS 2.0 / tvOS 9.0 / macOS 10.10 or later deployment targets
Linux
- Ubuntu 18.04 or later
- Swift 5.1 or later
Windows
- Swift 5.5 or later.
Swift Package Manager is a tool for managing the distribution of Swift code. It’s integrated with the Swift build system to automate the process of downloading, compiling, and linking dependencies on all platforms.
Once you have your Swift package set up, adding XMLCoder as a dependency is as
easy as adding it to the dependencies value of your Package.swift.
dependencies: [ .package(url: "https://github.com/CoreOffice/XMLCoder.git", from: "0.15.0") ]
If you're using XMLCoder in an app built with Xcode, you can also add it as a direct dependency using Xcode's GUI.
CocoaPods is a dependency manager for Swift and Objective-C Cocoa projects for Apple's platfoms. You can install it with the following command:
$ gem install cocoapods
Navigate to the project directory and create Podfile with the following command:
$ pod install
Inside of your Podfile, specify the XMLCoder pod:
# Uncomment the next line to define a global platform for your project # platform :ios, '9.0' target 'YourApp' do # Comment the next line if you're not using Swift or don't want # to use dynamic frameworks use_frameworks! # Pods for YourApp pod 'XMLCoder', '~> 0.14.0' end
Then, run the following command:
$ pod install
Open the the YourApp.xcworkspace file that was created. This should be the
file you use everyday to create your app, instead of the YourApp.xcodeproj
file.
Carthage is a dependency manager for Apple's platfoms that builds your dependencies and provides you with binary frameworks.
Carthage can be installed with Homebrew using the following command:
$ brew update $ brew install carthage
Inside of your Cartfile, add GitHub path to XMLCoder:
github "CoreOffice/XMLCoder" ~> 0.15.0
Then, run the following command to build the framework:
$ carthage update
Drag the built framework into your Xcode project.
extension XMLEncoder: ContentEncoder { public func encode<E: Encodable>( _ encodable: E, to body: inout ByteBuffer, headers: inout HTTPHeaders ) throws { headers.contentType = .xml // Note: You can provide an XMLHeader or DocType if necessary let data = try self.encode(encodable) body.writeData(data) } } extension XMLDecoder: ContentDecoder { public func decode<D: Decodable>( _ decodable: D.Type, from body: ByteBuffer, headers: HTTPHeaders ) throws -> D { // Force wrap is acceptable, as we're guaranteed these bytes exist through `readableBytes` let body = body.readData(length: body.readableBytes)! return try self.decode(D.self, from: body) } }
This project adheres to the Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report unacceptable behavior to coreoffice@desiatov.com.
This project uses SwiftFormat and SwiftLint to enforce formatting and coding style. We encourage you to run SwiftFormat within a local clone of the repository in whatever way works best for you either manually or automatically via an Xcode extension, build phase or git pre-commit hook etc.
To guarantee that these tools run before you commit your changes on macOS, you're encouraged to run this once to set up the pre-commit hook:
brew bundle # installs SwiftLint, SwiftFormat and pre-commit
pre-commit install # installs pre-commit hook to run checks before you commit
Refer to the pre-commit documentation page for more details and installation instructions for other platforms.
SwiftFormat and SwiftLint also run on CI for every PR and thus a CI build can fail with incosistent formatting or style. We require CI builds to pass for all PRs before merging.
Our goal is to keep XMLCoder stable and to serialize any XML correctly according to XML 1.0 standard. All of this can be easily tested automatically and we're slowly improving test coverage of XMLCoder and don't expect it to decrease. PRs that decrease the test coverage have a much lower chance of being merged. If you add any new features, please make sure to add tests, likewise for changes and any refactoring in existing code.