URLQueryEncoder
A customizable Swift Encoder
that encodes instances of data types as URL query items. Supports all [OpenAPI] query parameter serialization options.
Examples
Encoding Primitives
let encoder = URLQueryEncoder()
encoder.encode(["id": id])
print(encoder.queryItems)
// [URLQueryItem(name: "id", value: "5")]
Encoding Arrays
let ids = [3, 4, 5]
let encoder = URLQueryEncoder()
encoder.encode(["id": ids])
// Query: "id=3&id=4&id=5"
With an explode
option disabled:
let ids = [3, 4, 5]
let encoder = URLQueryEncoder()
encoder.encode(["id": ids], explode: false)
// Query: "id=3,4,5"
With an explode
option disabled and a custom delimiter:
let ids = [3, 4, 5]
let encoder = URLQueryEncoder()
encoder.encode(["id": ids], explode: false, delimiter: "|")
// Query: "id=3|4|5"
Encoding Objects
let user = User(role: "admin", name: "kean")
let encoder = URLQueryEncoder()
encoder.encode(user)
// Query: "role=admin&name=kean"
With an explode
option disabled:
let user = User(role: "admin", name: "kean")
let encoder = URLQueryEncoder()
encoder.encode(user, explode: false)
// Query: "id=role,admin,name,kean"
As a “deep” object:
let user = User(role: "admin", name: "kean")
let encoder = URLQueryEncoder()
encoder.encode(user, isDeepObject: true)
// Query: "id[role]=admin&id[name]=kean")"
Encoding Options
There are two ways to change the encoding options: settings them directly on URLQueryEncoder
instance, or passing options in each individual encode
call. The reason it’s designed this way is that in OpenAPI, each parameter can have different serialization options.
let encoder = URLQueryEncoder()
encoder.explode = false
encoder.isDeepObject = true
encoder.delimiter = "|"
encoder.dateEncodingStrategy = .millisecondsSince1970
You can use URLQueryEncoder
to encode more that one parameter are a time:
let user = User(role: "admin", name: "kean")
let ids = [3, 4, 5]
let encoder = URLQueryEncoder()
encoder.encode(["ids": ids], explode: false)
encoder.encode(["ids2": ids], explode: true)
encoder.encode(["user": user], isDeepObject: true)
encoder.encode(["id": 2])
// Query: "ids=3,4,5&ids2=3&ids2=4&ids2=5&user[role]=admin&user[name]=kean&id=2"
Accessing Results
You can access the encoding results at any time, and they come in different forms:
public final class URLQueryEncoder {
// Encoded query items.
public var queryItems: [URLQueryItem]
// Encoded query items as name-value pairs.
public var items: [(String, String?)]
// The encoded query items as a URL query subcomponent.
public var query: String?
// The encoded query items as a URL query subcomponent with percent-encoded values.
public var percentEncodedQuery: String?
}
License
URLQueryEncoder is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.