I wanted to create an app that organizes and displays the data I want in a fandom wiki for me, so I downloaded Swift Playgrounds on an iPad Pro, finished all the tutorials, and I’m working on it now. I’m already decently familiar with C/C++/C#, Java, Python, and a couple other languages (not Objective-C), but the Swift tutorials only really covered the basics and View
s, and didn’t really get into the unique Swift coding. Although I could manually input all the data and make the app work faster and offline, that’d be a huge pain, and the data on the wiki could change as the game updates.
I’ve searched for how here and with general web searches for several other sites, but not a single one of the methods described worked and provided me with something usable. Some old Objective-C guides indicated base capabilities of sorting webpage source data and generating tables (arrays of arrays) of String
s with data from a webpage table, but I couldn’t find anything on a Swift equivalent. Thus I’m assuming I’ll have to write my own sorting functions. I wont have trouble with that so long as I can get a String with the up to date source code from the webpage, but that’s the part I can’t seem to get.
Of all the methods I saw and tried (all of which failed) I like this one the best:
var source = String(contentsOf: URL(string: String)!, encoding: .ascii)
Where String
is the copy-pasted URL in quotation marks.
I get an error saying it can throw, and that that’s not allowed in a property initializer, and I’d like a way around that, but even if I have:
let address = URL(string: String)
var source = String(contentsOf: address, encoding: .ascii)
It tells me, “Cannot use instance member ‘address’ within property initializer; property initializer run before ‘self’ is available.” If I separate the String
out to a let
above that one the error comes up on the second let
. The Swift tutorials didn’t even explain what the difference between let
and var
was, but through past error messages I’m guessing let
is a “const var.” Regardless of which I use the error doesn’t change.
This one provided me with a useless String
containing "application/octet-stream"
, but was the only one that didn’t cause an error:
var resources = UTType(filenameExtension: URL(string: String)!.pathExtension)?.preferredMIMEType ?? "application/octet-stream"
I’ve never seen ??
before so I had to look that up. My understanding is that it’s an operator in Swift used to identify a default for if the other is nil
, but let me know if I’m wrong. I don’t understand the UTType or MIMEType very well either.
The tutorials also didn’t explain the ?
and !
in these kinds of uses. I would have guessed pointers, but given the use of var
and rumors I’ve heard I think Swift is more like C# with the whole lack of pointers. If not pointers (data vs memory address) then I’m guessing there’s like a “raw” and “stable” form based on past errors I’ve gotten. Where ?
brings it down to the “raw” form and !
brings it up to the “stable” form.
Optional
(well it's generic, so formally,Optional<Wrapped>
). It must be a decent idea, because Rust, C#, Java, Python and C++ have all introduced it in some flavor or another.