7

The technique to separate API keys in a xcconfig file described in this answer doesn't work with Swift 2.2 due to a bug (SR-909).

Is there any workaround?

2 Answers 2

5

Thanks for pointing to the bug, would not have figured this one out in a while. If it's any help I ended up adding an additional objc constants bridge to Swift and using the bridge constants from swift:

// Constants.h
extern NSString *const kDropBoxAPIKey;

// Constants.m
NSString *const kDropBoxAPIKey = DROPBOX_API_KEY;

// xxx-Bridging-Header.h
#import "Constants.h"

Then use the bridged key in Swift

// xx.swift
...
// let auth = DropboxAuth(appKey: DROPBOX_API_KEY) 
let auth = DropboxAuth(appKey: kDropBoxAPIKey)
...
1

You can declare another similar macro in bridging header file. Imagine we have MY_MACRO macro in preprocessing definitions. Swift code does not see it. In bridging header file we can define another macro:

#define MY_MACRO2 MY_MACRO

Now use MY_MACRO2 everywhere in Swift code. When Apple fixes this issue, you need rename MY_MACRO2 to MY_MACRO.

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