7.7 KiB
SwiftUIIntrospect
Note
SwiftUIIntrospect
is an all-new module based off the originalIntrospect
module that improves on stability, predictability, and ergonomics.Both modules currently live together under this repo, but the plan is to ultimately obsolete
Introspect
in favor ofSwiftUIIntrospect
as part of a 1.0 release.While
Introspect
supports Swift 5.5 or higher,SwiftUIIntrospect
requires Swift 5.7 or higher due to the use of more recent language features which partially enable the aforementioned improvements over the original.
SwiftUIIntrospect allows you to get the underlying UIKit or AppKit element of a SwiftUI view.
For instance, with SwiftUIIntrospect you can access UITableView
to modify separators, or UINavigationController
to customize the tab bar.
How it works
SwiftUIIntrospect works by adding an invisible IntrospectionView
on top of the selected view, and an invisible "anchor" view underneath it, then looking through the UIKit/AppKit view hierarchy between the two to find the relevant view.
For instance, when introspecting a ScrollView
...
ScrollView {
Text("Item 1")
}
.introspect(.scrollView, on: .iOS(.v13, .v14, .v15, .v16), .tvOS(.v13, .v14, .v15, .v16)) { scrollView in
// do something with UIScrollView
}
... it will:
- Add
IntrospectionView
as an overlay ofTextField
- Add
IntrospectionAnchorView
as the background ofTextField
. - Traverse through all the subviews between both views until a
UIScrollView
instance (if any) is found.
Warning Although the introspection method itself is very solid and unlikely to break in SwiftUI releases, future OS releases require explicit opt-in for introspection (
.iOS(.vXYZ)
), given differences between major OS versions which might not use the same UIKit/AppKit elements that are being looked for in previous OS versions.
By default, .introspect
works directly on its receiver. This means calling .introspect
from inside the view you're trying to introspect won't have any effect. This is different to the original Introspect
module in which some views would implicitly allow introspection from within. This is because most of the time it's more stable and predictable to introspect views directly, but there are times when it's not possible or simply too inflexible for library developers. You can introspect an ancestor with SwiftUIIntrospect
, but you must opt into this explicitly by overriding the introspection scope
:
ScrollView {
Text("Item 1")
.introspect(.scrollView, on: .iOS(.v13, .v14, .v15, .v16), .tvOS(.v13, .v14, .v15, .v16), scope: .ancestor) { scrollView in
// do something with UIScrollView
}
}
Usage in production
SwiftUIIntrospect
is meant to be used in production. It does not use any private API. It only inspects the view hierarchy using publicly available methods. The library takes a defensive approach to inspecting the view hierarchy: there is no hard assumption that elements are laid out a certain way, there is no force-cast to UIKit/AppKit classes, and the introspect()
methods are simply ignored if UIKit/AppKit views cannot be found.
Install
Swift Package Manager
let package = Package(
dependencies: [
.package(url: "https://github.com/siteline/swiftui-introspect", from: "0.4.0"),
],
targets: [
.target(name: <#Target Name#>, dependencies: [
.product(name: "SwiftUIIntrospect", package: "swiftui-introspect"),
]),
]
)
CocoaPods
pod 'SwiftUIIntrospect'
Introspection
Implemented
WIP
SwiftUIIntrospect
already supports all the view types that Introspect
supports, and more (e.g. ProgressView
, Table
). However, listing them all in a table is an arduous task that I'm still thinking of how to best accomplish (perhaps it's possible to automate via SwiftSyntax?). For now, I suggest diving into each view type's code file to figure out which platforms and underlying views are supported.
Missing an element? Please create an issue. As a temporary solution, you can implement your own introspectable view type.
Cannot implement
SwiftUI | Affected Frameworks | Why |
---|---|---|
Text | UIKit, AppKit | Not a UILabel / NSLabel |
Image | UIKit, AppKit | Not a UIImageView / NSImageView |
Button | UIKit | Not a UIButton |
Examples
List
List {
Text("Item")
}
.introspect(.list, on: .iOS(.v13, .v14, .v15), .tvOS(.v13, .v14, .v15, .v16)) { tableView in
tableView.backgroundView = UIView()
tableView.backgroundColor = .cyan
}
.introspect(.list, on: .iOS(.v16)) { collectionView in
collectionView.backgroundView = UIView()
collectionView.subviews.dropFirst(1).first?.backgroundColor = .cyan
}
ScrollView
ScrollView {
Text("Item")
}
.introspect(.scrollView, on: .iOS(.v13, .v14, .v15, .v16), .tvOS(.v13, .v14, .v15, .v16)) { scrollView in
scrollView.refreshControl = UIRefreshControl()
}
NavigationView
NavigationView {
Text("Item")
}
.navigationViewStyle(.stack)
.introspect(.navigationView(style: .stack), on: .iOS(.v13, .v14, .v15, .v16), .tvOS(.v13, .v14, .v15, .v16)) { navigationController in
navigationController.navigationBar.backgroundColor = .cyan
}
TextField
TextField("Text Field", text: <#Binding<String>#>)
.introspect(.textField, on: .iOS(.v13, .v14, .v15, .v16), .tvOS(.v13, .v14, .v15, .v16)) { textField in
textField.backgroundColor = .red
}
Implement your own selector
Missing an element? Please create an issue.
In case SwiftUIIntrospect doesn't support the SwiftUI element that you're looking for, you can implement your own selector. For example, to introspect a TextField
:
public struct TextFieldType: IntrospectableViewType {}
extension IntrospectableViewType where Self == TextFieldType {
public static var textField: Self { .init() }
}
#if canImport(UIKit)
extension iOSViewVersion<TextFieldType, UITextField> {
public static let v13 = Self(for: .v13)
public static let v14 = Self(for: .v14)
public static let v15 = Self(for: .v15)
public static let v16 = Self(for: .v16)
}
extension tvOSViewVersion<TextFieldType, UITextField> {
public static let v13 = Self(for: .v13)
public static let v14 = Self(for: .v14)
public static let v15 = Self(for: .v15)
public static let v16 = Self(for: .v16)
}
#elseif canImport(AppKit)
extension macOSViewVersion<TextFieldType, NSTextField> {
public static let v10_15 = Self(for: .v10_15)
public static let v11 = Self(for: .v11)
public static let v12 = Self(for: .v12)
public static let v13 = Self(for: .v13)
}
#endif
Releasing
-
Update changelog with new version
-
PR as 'Bump to X.Y.Z' and merge it
-
Tag new version:
$ git tag X.Y.Z $ git push origin --tags