Unrealm enables you to easily store Swift native Classes, Structs and Enums into Realm .
Stop inheriting from Object! Go for Protocol-Oriented programming!
Made with ❤️ by arturdev
Features
Unrealm supports the following types:
- [x] Swift Primitives
- [x] Swift Structs
- [x] Swift Classes
- [x] Swift Enums
- [x] Swift Arrays
- [x] Swift Dictionaries
- [x] Nested Classes/Structs
- [x] Swift Optionals (String, Data, Date)
- [x] Swift Optionals of primitives (Int, Float, Double, Bool)
- [x] Swift Optionals of Realmables
- [x] Swift Optionals of Arrays
- [x] Swift Arrays of enums
Example Project
To run the example project, clone the repo, and run pod install
from the Example directory first.
See also Unit Tests.
Usage
All you have to do is
- Conform your Classes/Structs to
Realmable
protocol instead of inheriting fromObject
. Conform your Enums toRealmableEnum
protocol. - Register your Classes/Structs and Enums in AppDelegate's
didFinishLaunchingWithOptions
.
Realm.registerRealmables(ToDoItem.self)
Thats it! Now you can store your Struct or Class object into Realm as usualy you do with Objc Classes.
Pros and Cons
Pros ?
- Enables you to store Swift native types (Structs, Classes, Enums, Arrays, Dictionaries, etc...)
- Getting rid of redundant inheriting from Object class
- Getting rid of Realm crashes like "Object has been deleted or invalidated"
- Getting rid of Realm crashes like "Realm accessed from incorrect thread"
- Getting rid of boilerplate code such as
@objc dynamic var
. Use justvar
orlet
- Getting rid of boilerplate code such as
RealmOptional<Int>
. Use justInt?
- Works perfect with Swift's Codable and optional types!
Cons ?
- Losing "Live Objects" feature. Which means when you modify an object got from Realm the other ones will not be updated automatically. So after modifying an object you should manually update it in realm.
f.e.;
let realm = try! Realm()
var todoItem = realm.object(ofType: ToDoItem.self, forPrimaryKey: "1")
todoItem.text = "Modified text"
try! realm.write {
realm.add(todoItem, update: true) //<- force Realm to update the object
}
Installation
CocoaPods
Unrealm is available through CocoaPods. To install
it, simply add the following line to your Podfile:
pod 'Unrealm'
Swift Package Manager
You can also use Swift Package Manager to add Unrealm as a dependency to your project. In order to do so, use the following URL:
https://github.com/arturdev/Unrealm.git
You need to use "master" branch instead of SPM.
ToDos
- Add more UnitTests
- Create a sample project for Swift Package Manager when dependencies can be added to many targets in a simple project.
Contribution
⭐️ If you like what you see, star us on GitHub.
Find a bug, a typo, or something that’s not documented well? We’d love for you to open an issue telling me what I can improve!
Contributions are welcome, and they are greatly appreciated!
Author
arturdev, [email protected]
License
Unrealm is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.