Extends @AppStorage
in SwiftUI to support any Codable object. I use SwiftUI for quick prototypes, and this makes it a lot easier to stay organized.
Just swap @AppCodableStorage
for @AppStorage
and tag your type as PropertyListRepresentable
and you're good to go.
Like AppStorage
struct Config: PropertyListRepresentable {
var username: String
var profileColor: NSColor?
}
struct MyView: View {
@AppCodableStorage("user") var settings = Config(username: "Steve")
var body: some View {
TextField($config.username)
...
}
}
- Use storage in multiple views, they automatically reflect the most recent value
- projectedValue / Bindings so you can pass a sub-object into a sub-view mutably
- Observes UserDefaults so it can interoperate with other code /
defaults write …
changes
The underlying implementation is in DefaultsWriter
, which is useful if you have other subsystems in your app that want to write to and observe UserDefaults
in this way. For that purpose, there is also a DefaultsWriter.objectDidChange
Publisher
to use when you want the updated value rather than a signal that it's about to change.
- Root must code as a Dictionary
- Encodes to
Data
and back
The default implementation of PlistReprestable is inelegant, but supports the same use cases as PlistEncoder, since I use PlistEncoder to first convert to Data and then decode the data.
A "better" solution would be to copy-paste most of the code from PlistEncoder to be able to use PlistCoder.encodeToTopLevelContainer()
, which is marked internal
in the standard library. If it were made public, this could be much more elegant.
You can use RawRepresentable
with the built-in AppStorage to store Codable in a string key in
UserDefaults`. This means that your defaults is now unreadable since there is a weird string or binary data in there.
I realize Mike Ash independently made TSUD, which does something pretty similar prior to SwiftUI.
Do not use this to store a large amount of data! No images, unlimited amounts of text, files etc.
You should sanitize any user input to make sure that it ends up a reasonable size.