ReSwift/ReSwift-Router

Name: ReSwift-Router

Owner: ReSwift

Description: Declarative Routing in Swift, Extension for ReSwift

Created: 2015-12-15 08:31:30.0

Updated: 2018-05-23 10:53:27.0

Pushed: 2018-03-27 18:41:19.0

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Size: 3434

Language: Swift

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README

Carthage compatible Platform support

A declarative router for ReSwift. Allows developers to declare routes in a similar manner as URLs are used on the web.

Using ReSwiftRouter you can navigate your app by defining the target location in the form of a URL-like sequence of identifiers:

Store.dispatch(
SetRouteAction(["TabBarViewController", StatsViewController.identifier])

About ReSwiftRouter

ReSwiftRouter is still under development and the API is neither complete nor stable at this point.

When building apps with ReSwift you should aim to cause all state changes through actions - this includes changes to the navigation state.

This requires to store the current navigation state within the app state and to use actions to trigger changes to that state - both is provided ReSwiftRouter.

Installation

CocoaPods

You can install ReSwiftRouter via CocoaPods by adding it to your Podfile:

use_frameworks!

source 'https://github.com/CocoaPods/Specs.git'
platform :ios, '8.0'

pod 'ReSwift'
pod 'ReSwiftRouter'

And run pod install.

Carthage

You can install ReSwiftRouter via Carthage by adding the following line to your Cartfile:

github "ReSwift/ReSwiftRouter"

Configuration

Extend your app state to include the navigation state:

rt ReSwiftRouter

ct AppState: StateType {
// other application state
var navigationState: NavigationState

After you've initialized your store, create an instance of Router, passing in a reference to the store and to the root Routable. Additionally you will need to provide a closure that describes how to access the navigationState of your application state:

er = Router(store: mainStore, rootRoutable: RootRoutable(routable: rootViewController)) { state in 
state.select { $0.navigationState }

We'll discuss Routable in the next main section.

Calling the Navigation Reducer

The NavigationReducer is provided as part of ReSwiftRouter. You need to call it from within your top-level reducer. Here's a simple example from the specs:

ct AppReducer: Reducer {
func handleAction(action: Action, state: FakeAppState?) -> FakeAppState {
    return FakeAppState(
        navigationState: NavigationReducer.handleAction(action, state: state?.navigationState)
    )
}

This will make reducer handle all routing relevant actions.

Implementing Routable

ReSwiftRouter works with routes that are defined, similar to URLs, as a sequence of identifiers e.g. ["Home", "User", "UserDetail"].

ReSwiftRouter is agnostic of the UI framework you are using - it uses Routables to implement that interaction.

Each route segment is mapped to one responsible Routable. The Routable needs to be able to present a child, hide a child or replace a child with another child.

Here is the Routable protocol with the methods you should implement:

ocol Routable {

func changeRouteSegment(from: RouteElementIdentifier,
    to: RouteElementIdentifier,
    completionHandler: RoutingCompletionHandler) -> Routable

func pushRouteSegment(routeElementIdentifier: RouteElementIdentifier,
    completionHandler: RoutingCompletionHandler) -> Routable

func popRouteSegment(routeElementIdentifier: RouteElementIdentifier,
    completionHandler: RoutingCompletionHandler)


As part of initializing Router you need to pass the first Routable as an argument. That root Routable will be responsible for the first route segment.

If e.g. you set the route of your application to ["Home"], your root Routable will be asked to present the view that corresponds to the identifier "Home".

When working on iOS with UIKit this would mean the Routable would need to set the rootViewController of the application.

Whenever a Routable presents a new route segment, it needs to return a new Routable that will be responsible for managing the presented segment. If you want to navigate from ["Home"] to ["Home", "Users"] the Routable responsible for the "Home" segment will be asked to present the "User" segment.

If your navigation stack uses a modal presentation for this transition, the implementation of Routable for the "Home" segment might look like this:

 pushRouteSegment(identifier: RouteElementIdentifier,
completionHandler: RoutingCompletionHandler) -> Routable {

if identifier == "User" {
    // 1.) Perform the transition
    userViewController = UIStoryboard(name: "Main", bundle: nil)
        .instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier("UserViewController") as! Routable

    // 2.) Call the `completionHandler` once the transition is complete
    presentViewController(userViewController, animated: false,
        completion: completionHandler)

    // 3.) Return the Routable for the presented segment. For convenience
    // this will often be the UIViewController itself. 
    return userViewController
}

// ...


 popRouteSegment(identifier: RouteElementIdentifier,
completionHandler: RoutingCompletionHandler) {

if identifier == "Home" {
    dismissViewControllerAnimated(false, completion: completionHandler)
}

// ...

Calling the Completion Handler within Routables

ReSwiftRouter needs to throttle the navigation actions, since many UI frameworks including UIKit don't allow to perform multiple navigation steps in parallel. Therefor every method of Routable receives a completionHandler. The router will not perform any further navigation actions until the completion handler is called.

Changing the Current Route

Currently the only way to change the current application route is by using the SetRouteAction and providing an absolute route. Here's a brief example:

ction func cancelButtonTapped(sender: UIButton) {
mainStore.dispatch(
    SetRouteAction(["TabBarViewController", StatsViewController.identifier])
)

As development continues, support for changing individual route segments will be added.

Contributing

Compiling & Running tests

ReSwiftRouter uses Carthage for its development dependencies. To build or test any of the targets, run carthage bootstrap.


This work is supported by the National Institutes of Health's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, Grant Number U24TR002306. This work is solely the responsibility of the creators and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.