0

I just converted my project to swift 4, but I having error when I emulate my app with SWXMLHash:

    var code: Int! = nil
    var message: String! = nil
    var paramsContent: String! = nil
    let xmlStrData = SWXMLHash.lazy(strData)

    let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
    dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd"


    let appDel: AppDelegate = UIApplication.shared.delegate as! AppDelegate
    let context: NSManagedObjectContext = appDel.managedObjectContext

    let simulationParamsDescription = NSEntityDescription.entity(forEntityName: "SimulationParams", in: context)
    let simulationParams = NSManagedObject(entity: simulationParamsDescription!, insertInto: context)


    code = Int((xmlStrData["SOAP-ENV:Envelope"]["SOAP-ENV:Body"]["ns1:GetSimulationParamsResponse"]["GetSimulationParamsReturn"]["code"].element?.text)!)!
    message = xmlStrData["SOAP-ENV:Envelope"]["SOAP-ENV:Body"]["ns1:GetSimulationParamsResponse"]["GetSimulationParamsReturn"]["message"].element?.text

When i'm trying to get the code node value, I get this error:

EXC_BAD_INSTRUCTION (code=EXC_I386_INVOP, subcode=0x0)

1 Answer 1

0

It seems likely something is going wrong with the parsing here - most probably the structure of the XML response is not exactly what you think it is.

In general in Swift it's a good idea to steer away from force unwrapping optionals with ! because if there isn't anything there you are guaranteeing that the app will crash. It's better to use if lets and guard statements, even if it makes the code uglier, just because it's safer.

To debug this, I'd rewrite your the last two lines as a series of guards (not sure what the types involved are, so you'll have to fill in $DICT_TYPE_HERE appropriately). You may not need to do it for every level, but I'd definitely avoid accessing 4-5 levels on one line - it's just asking for trouble.

guard let envelope = xmlStrData["SOAP-ENV:Envelope"] else as? $DICT_TYPE_HERE {
 //handle failure
 return 
}
guard let body = envelope["SOAP-ENV:Body"] else as? $DICT_TYPE_HERE {
 //handle failure 
 return 
}
.
.
until you find the problem

Ideally you should be using an XML object mapper, which allows you to declare Swift objects that can be translated back and forth to XML, but unfortunately I can't find an obvious one for Swift (there are loads for JSON, including the shiny new Codable protocol made by Apple itself).

1
  • I don't think that's the problem is here, it's because of SWXMLHash when I passed on Swift 4 I don't see data when I'm on debug mode
    – Ben
    Jan 18, 2018 at 15:08

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.