πͺΆ Lightweight, Swift-y looking code for modern SwiftUI developers
𧩠Useful methods and properties written in native Swift
π§ Wiki under construction. Read below to get started!
FoundationPlus is a suite of basic Swift extensions that help speed up the process of app development, and help make your code look nicer. Functions that you'll normally need, like methods to check the app's version, get the current day of week, and so on, can have convoluted code. FoundationPlus simplifies these with built-in extensions.
// π΄ Before
let interval = TimeInterval(9945)
// β¨ After
let interval = 2.hours + 45.minutes + 45.seconds
// π΄ Before
if let value = optionalValue {
myVar = value
} else {
myVar = nil
}
// β¨ After
myVar =? optionalValue
// π΄ Before
if array.count >= 5 {
myVar = array[4]
}
// β¨ After
myVar = array[safe: 4]
- Extensions
- Other Features
Most of the above features are cross-platform and are supported on iOS, macOS, tvOS and watchOS.
Add FoundationPlus to your project using Swift Package Manager:
https://github.com/Flowductive/foundation-plus
Get TimeIntervals
easily:
let interval = 10.minutes
let interval2 = 4.days
Format TimeInterval
s:
print(3.hours.formattedColon) // 3:00
print((2.minutes + 30.seconds).formatted(.short)) // 2m 30s
print(4.hours.formatted(.full)) // 4 hours
Get the current month, day, hour, minute, etc:
let date = Date()
let dateFormatted = "The current time is \(date.hour) : \(date.minute)."
Get a date moved forward to right before midnight:
let thisEvening = date.atMidnight
Get formatted versions of the date:
print(date.shorthand) // 6/7/22
print(date.longhand) // Tuesday, June 07, 2022
Subtract dates and get a TimeInterval
:
let timeBetween = laterDate - earlierDate
Get the next/preview occurence of a specific weekday:
let nextTuesday = Date().next(.tuesday)
let lastWednesday = Date().previous(.wednesday, considerToday: false)
Get a string representing how long it's been since the Date
:
print(lastWednesday.timeAgoSince()) // 2 days ago
Safely subscript arrays, and even wrap array indices:
let myString = ["a", "b", "c", "d"]
let myString: String = myStrings[safe: 5] ?? "-" // "-"
let myString2: String = myString[wrap: 5] // "b"
Use new operators on arrays:
var array: [1, 2, 3]
// Add the element(s) if it is not inside
array <= 4 // [1, 2, 3, 4]
array <= 2 // [1, 2, 3, 4]
array <= [4, 5] // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
// Remove elements
array -= 1 // [2, 3, 4, 5]
array -= [2, 3, 6] // [4, 5]
Use additional methods on arrays:
let array = [1, 2, 3, 3]
// Add to the end if not already in the array
array.appendUniquely(5) // [1, 2, 3, 3, 5]
// Add to the beginning if not already in the array
array.pushUniquely(0) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 3, 5]
// Remove all of an element
array.removeAll(3) // [0, 1, 2, 5]
// Pick a random bunch of elements
array.pick(2) // [0, 2]
Optionally assign the right-hand side to the left-hand side if non-nil
:
var str: String = "Hello World"
var optionalStr: String? = nil
str =? optionalStr // Only sets str if myOptionalString is non-nil
print(str) // "Hello, world"
Optionally check if two Optional
or non-Optional
values are equal/nonequal, and return false
for equality and true
for inequality if either value is nil
:
let areEqual: Bool { nil ==? 4 } // False
let areNonEqual: Bool { 4 !=? 3 } // True
Return only alpha-numeric parts of a String:
let alphanumeric = "Abc123+-=~".alphanumeric // "Abc123"
Return the first word of a String:
let first = "Hello World!".firstWord // "Hello"
Get a random alphanumeric string with a specified length:
let random = String.random(16) // "b7vb92Fg9FEN2g8A"
Repeat a String:
let repeated = "Hi".repeat(5) // "HiHiHiHiHi"
Check if a String is a valid email:
let isEmailValid: Bool = "test@hi.com".isValidEmail() // True
Quickly open a URL in iOS or macOS:
myUrl.open()
Grab information regarding the time of day:
let part = DayPart.get(from: Date()) // Chooses automatically from .morning, .midday, .afternoon, .evening, .night, and .midnight
print(part.greeting) // "Good morning!"