-2

[I am new to Swift, I don't know is this possible or not, so please suggest me]

I have a dictionary (which is dynamic) like this:

let simpleHash = ["testA": "A", "testB": "B", "testC": "C"]

I want to convert this to an Object, so that I can access like:

simpleHash.testA // instead of simpleHash["testA"]

I have tried the below one, but it didn't help

let jsonData = try JSONSerialization.data(withJSONObject: simpleHash, options: .prettyPrinted)
let decoded = try JSONSerialization.jsonObject(with: jsonData, options: [])

Can anyone please suggest me on this. Thanks in advance!

4
  • What object are you talking about? And what does your dictionary have to do with JSON?
    – El Tomato
    Sep 21, 2017 at 1:52
  • @ElTomato I clearly mentioned what I want from the dictionary simpleHash
    – Raja
    Sep 21, 2017 at 1:54
  • Look into JSONDecoder.
    – rmaddy
    Sep 21, 2017 at 2:14
  • You mean a struct or a class instead of a Dictionary?
    – user887210
    Sep 21, 2017 at 2:36

2 Answers 2

1

Swift will need an explicitly declared variable for testA so you will not be able to be 100% dynamic. But, since you need to use the variable in code, it will be known at some point. Given this and in the spirit of minimizing the declaration constraints, you could define a class that uses the dictionary as its internal storage and exposes the key values as computed properties.

here's an example:

class DictionaryBased
{
   var content:[String:Any]
   init(_ dictionary:[String:Any])
   { content = dictionary }

   func get<T>(_ key:String, _ defaultValue:T) -> T 
   { return content[key] as? T ?? defaultValue }

   func set<T>(_ key:String, _ value:T)  
   { content[key] = value }
}

class SimpleHash:DictionaryBased 
{}

With this, you can add computed properties as needed (and where needed) using extensions.

extension SimpleHash
{
  var testA:String { get { return get("testA", "") }  set { set("testA",newValue) } }
  var testB:String { get { return get("testB", "") }  set { set("testB",newValue) } }

  // if variables are "read-only", you don't need the set { } part
  var testC:String { get { return get("testC", "") }  }
}

You can add variables that are typed or not and support optionals or, (as above) provide default values.

extension SimpleHash
{
  var testD:Any?    { get { return get("testD", nil) }  set { set("testD",newValue) } }
  var testE:String? { get { return get("testE", nil) }  set { set("testE",newValue) } }
  var testF:Date?   { get { return get("testF", nil) }  set { set("testE",newValue) } }
}

To use this "dictionary based" object, you would need to create an instance at some point and give it the dictionary's content:

let simpleHash = SimpleHash(["testA": "A", "testB": "B", "testC": "C"])

simpleHash.testA  // "A"
simpleHash.testD  // nil

Note that, this isn't going to be as efficient as using native properties and mapping the dictionary to each physical variable. On the other hand, it is a lot less code so. If the variables are not referenced often, the extra overhead may be an acceptable trade off for simplicity and flexibility.

0
1

A simple struct to hold your Dictionary values:

struct SimpleStruct {
  // properties are Optional since they might not be matched
  let testA: String?
  let testB: String?

  // this one has a default value
  let testC: String

  // init that takes a Dictionary
  init(dictionary: [String:Any]) {
    // set the Optional ones
    self.testA = dictionary["testA"] as? String
    self.testB = dictionary["testB"] as? String

    // set the one with a default
    self.testC = dictionary["testC"] as? String ?? "C"
  }
}

let foo = SimpleStruct(dictionary: ["testA": "A", "testB": "B", "testC": "C"])

// force-unwrapping for brevity
// you should actually test before using
print(foo.testA!) // prints A
print(foo.testB!) // prints B
print(foo.testC)  // prints C
2
  • 2
    Better to make the initializer failable, than to make all the properties optional
    – Alexander
    Sep 21, 2017 at 3:42
  • @Alexander True, a failable initializer would also work. I didn't make this one failable because I included a default value for one of them.
    – user887210
    Sep 21, 2017 at 3:44

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.