Helping you own NotificationCenter in Swift
Notificationz
?
Helping you own NotificationCenter
Highlights
-
Keep Your Naming Conventions:
This library gives you convenient access toNotificationCenter
, but it’s up to you to set it up the way you like! -
Nothing to Hide:
Not trying to hideNotificationCenter
functionality. Just an attempt to provide a more convenient API -
Full and Simple Testing:
Testing this library was simple, since it only forwards calls toNotificationCenter
for the most part. Mocking that object allowed tests to reach 100% coverage.
Features
You can try them in the playground shipped with the framework!
Use your own naming convention to wrap NotificationCenter
let nsCenter = NotificationCenter.default
let ? = NotificationCenterAdapter(notificationCenter: nsCenter)
?.post(.?)
// my personal preference, define this in Globals.swift
let NC = NotificationCenterAdapter(notificationCenter: nsCenter)
// Now, you can use `NC` throughout the app
Four simple keywords to remember
let obj = Object()
NC.add(obj, selector: #selector(Object.call)) // normal add observer
NC.observe { notification in } // observe using blocks
NC.post(.tenhut) // post a notification
NC.remove(obj) // remove from nsCenter
Transparent and convenient API
let keys = ["observe", "many", "keys"].map { Notification.Name($0) }
NC.observe(keys) { _ in } // observe on the same thread
NC.observeUI(keys) { _ in } // delivered to the main thread
NC.post(.test)
NC.post(.test, userInfo: ["info":5])
NC.post(Notification(name: .test, object: nil))
RAII-based observers
class Dummy {
// declare the observer as optional
var broadcastObserver: Observer?
init() {
// assign it anywhere you like
broadcastObserver = NC.observe { [unowned self] _ in
self.doSomething()
}.execute() // this is a neat bonus feature
}
func doSomething() {
// exectued twice, since we call "execute" manually
print("it works!")
}
}
var dummy: Dummy? = Dummy()
NC.post(.test) // calls doSomething
dummy = nil // clean up is automatic
NC.post(.test) // doesn't crash!
Getting Started
Carthage
Carthage is fully supported. Simply add the following line to your Cartfile:
github "SwiftKitz/Notificationz"
Cocoapods
Cocoapods is fully supported. Simply add the following line to your Podfile:
pod 'Notificationz'
Submodule
For manual installation, you can grab the source directly or through git submodules, then simply:
- Drop the
Notificationz.xcodeproj
file as a subproject (make sureCopy resources
is not enabled) - Navigate to your root project settings. Under “Embedded Binaries”, click the “+” button and select the
Notificationz.framework
Motivation
After migrating to Swift, the NotificationCenter
APIs really stood out in the code. Writing so much boiler plate all over the place just to register, handle, and cleanup notifications. Coming from C++, RAII seemed a pretty invaluable pattern to be applied here.
With this framework, one can easily declare all their observers as properties:
class Sample {
private var keyboardObserver: Observer?
private var reachabilityObserver: Observer?
}
Other programmers should be pleased with this consistency! Moreover, there is no need to worry handling notifications in some other function somewhere nor do cleanup in deinit
. It just works:
keyboardObserver = NC.observeUI(UIKeyboardWillShowNotification) { [unowned self] _ in
// you can write your handler code here, maybe call another function
}
// you can force cleanup by setting the property to nil, but don't have to
keyboardObserver = nil
Author
Maz (@Mazyod)
License
Notificationz is released under the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.