A SwiftUI implementation of React Hooks.
Enhances reusability of stateful logic and gives state and lifecycle to function view.
- Introduction
- Getting Started
- Hooks API
- Rules of Hooks
- Building Your Own Hooks
- How to Test Your Custom Hooks
- Context
- License
func timer() -> some View {
let time = useState(Date())
useEffect(.once) {
let timer = Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: 1, repeats: true) {
time.wrappedValue = $0.fireDate
}
return {
timer.invalidate()
}
}
return Text("Time: \(time.wrappedValue)")
}
SwiftUI Hooks is a SwiftUI implementation of React Hooks. Brings the state and lifecycle into the function view, without depending on elements that are only allowed to be used in struct views such as @State
or @ObservedObject
.
It allows you to reuse stateful logic between views by building custom hooks composed with multiple hooks.
Furthermore, hooks such as useEffect
also solve the problem of lack of lifecycles in SwiftUI.
The API and behavioral specs of SwiftUI Hooks are entirely based on React Hooks, so you can leverage your knowledge of web applications to your advantage.
There're already a bunch of documentations on React Hooks, so you can refer to it and learn more about Hooks.
Minimum Version | |
---|---|
Swift | 5.6 |
Xcode | 13.3 |
iOS | 13.0 |
macOS | 10.15 |
tvOS | 13.0 |
watchOS | 6.0 |
The module name of the package is Hooks
. Choose one of the instructions below to install and add the following import statement to your source code.
import Hooks
From Xcode menu: File
> Swift Packages
> Add Package Dependency
https://github.com/ra1028/swiftui-hooks
In your Package.swift
file, first add the following to the package dependencies
:
.package(url: "https://github.com/ra1028/swiftui-hooks"),
And then, include "Hooks" as a dependency for your target:
.target(name: "<target>", dependencies: [
.product(name: "Hooks", package: "swiftui-hooks"),
]),
π Click to open the description.
useState
func useState<State>(_ initialState: State) -> Binding<State>
func useState<State>(_ initialState: @escaping () -> State) -> Binding<State>
A hook to use a Binding<State>
wrapping current state to be updated by setting a new state to wrappedValue
.
Triggers a view update when the state has been changed.
let count = useState(0) // Binding<Int>
Button("Increment") {
count.wrappedValue += 1
}
If the initial state is the result of an expensive computation, you may provide a closure instead. The closure will be executed once, during the initial render.
let count = useState {
let initialState = expensiveComputation() // Int
return initialState
} // Binding<Int>
Button("Increment") {
count.wrappedValue += 1
}
useEffect
func useEffect(_ updateStrategy: HookUpdateStrategy? = nil, _ effect: @escaping () -> (() -> Void)?)
A hook to use a side effect function that is called the number of times according to the strategy specified with updateStrategy
.
Optionally the function can be cancelled when this hook is disposed or when the side-effect function is called again.
Note that the execution is deferred until after other hooks have been updated.
useEffect {
print("Do side effects")
return {
print("Do cleanup")
}
}
useLayoutEffect
func useLayoutEffect(_ updateStrategy: HookUpdateStrategy? = nil, _ effect: @escaping () -> (() -> Void)?)
A hook to use a side effect function that is called the number of times according to the strategy specified with updateStrategy
.
Optionally the function can be cancelled when this hook is unmount from the view tree or when the side-effect function is called again.
The signature is identical to useEffect
, but this fires synchronously when the hook is called.
useLayoutEffect {
print("Do side effects")
return nil
}
useMemo
func useMemo<Value>(_ updateStrategy: HookUpdateStrategy, _ makeValue: @escaping () -> Value) -> Value
A hook to use memoized value preserved until it is updated at the timing determined with given updateStrategy
.
let random = useMemo(.once) {
Int.random(in: 0...100)
}
useRef
func useRef<T>(_ initialValue: T) -> RefObject<T>
A hook to use a mutable ref object storing an arbitrary value.
The essential of this hook is that setting a value to current
doesn't trigger a view update.
let value = useRef("text") // RefObject<String>
Button("Save text") {
value.current = "new text"
}
useReducer
func useReducer<State, Action>(_ reducer: @escaping (State, Action) -> State, initialState: State) -> (state: State, dispatch: (Action) -> Void)
A hook to use the state returned by the passed reducer
, and a dispatch
function to send actions to update the state.
Triggers a view update when the state has been changed.
enum Action {
case increment, decrement
}
func reducer(state: Int, action: Action) -> Int {
switch action {
case .increment:
return state + 1
case .decrement:
return state - 1
}
}
let (count, dispatch) = useReducer(reducer, initialState: 0)
useAsync
func useAsync<Output>(_ updateStrategy: HookUpdateStrategy, _ operation: @escaping () async -> Output) -> AsyncPhase<Output, Never>
func useAsync<Output>(_ updateStrategy: HookUpdateStrategy, _ operation: @escaping () async throws -> Output) -> AsyncPhase<Output, Error>
A hook to use the most recent phase of asynchronous operation of the passed function.
The function will be performed at the first update and will be re-performed according to the given updateStrategy
.
let phase = useAsync(.once) {
try await URLSession.shared.data(from: url)
}
useAsyncPerform
func useAsyncPerform<Output>(_ operation: @escaping @MainActor () async -> Output) -> (phase: AsyncPhase<Output, Never>, perform: @MainActor () async -> Void)
func useAsyncPerform<Output>(_ operation: @escaping @MainActor () async throws -> Output) -> (phase: AsyncPhase<Output, Error>, perform: @MainActor () async -> Void)
A hook to use the most recent phase of the passed asynchronous operation, and a perform
function to call the it at arbitrary timing.
let (phase, perform) = useAsyncPerform {
try await URLSession.shared.data(from: url)
}
usePublisher
func usePublisher<P: Publisher>(_ updateStrategy: HookUpdateStrategy, _ makePublisher: @escaping () -> P) -> AsyncPhase<P.Output, P.Failure>
A hook to use the most recent phase of asynchronous operation of the passed publisher.
The publisher will be subscribed at the first update and will be re-subscribed according to the given updateStrategy
.
let phase = usePublisher(.once) {
URLSession.shared.dataTaskPublisher(for: url)
}
usePublisherSubscribe
func usePublisherSubscribe<P: Publisher>(_ makePublisher: @escaping () -> P) -> (phase: AsyncPhase<P.Output, P.Failure>, subscribe: () -> Void)
A hook to use the most recent phase of asynchronous operation of the passed publisher, and a subscribe
function to subscribe to it at arbitrary timing.
let (phase, subscribe) = usePublisherSubscribe {
URLSession.shared.dataTaskPublisher(for: url)
}
useEnvironment
func useEnvironment<Value>(_ keyPath: KeyPath<EnvironmentValues, Value>) -> Value
A hook to use environment value passed through the view tree without @Environment
property wrapper.
let colorScheme = useEnvironment(\.colorScheme) // ColorScheme
useContext
func useContext<T>(_ context: Context<T>.Type) -> T
A hook to use current context value that is provided by Context<T>.Provider
.
The purpose is identical to use Context<T>.Consumer
.
See Context section for more details.
let value = useContext(Context<Int>.self) // Int
See also: React Hooks API Reference
In order to take advantage of the wonderful interface of Hooks, the same rules that React hooks has must also be followed by SwiftUI Hooks.
[Disclaimer]: These rules are not technical constraints specific to SwiftUI Hooks, but are necessary based on the design of the Hooks itself. You can see here to know more about the rules defined for React Hooks.
* In -Onone builds, if a violation against this rules is detected, it asserts by an internal sanity check to help the developer notice the mistake in the use of hooks. However, hooks also has disableHooksRulesAssertion
modifier in case you want to disable the assertions.
Do not call Hooks inside conditions or loops. The order in which hook is called is important since Hooks uses LinkedList to keep track of its state.
π’ DO
@ViewBuilder
func counterButton() -> some View {
let count = useState(0) // π’ Uses hook at the top level
Button("You clicked \(count.wrappedValue) times") {
count.wrappedValue += 1
}
}
π΄ DON'T
@ViewBuilder
func counterButton() -> some View {
if condition {
let count = useState(0) // π΄ Uses hook inside condition.
Button("You clicked \(count.wrappedValue) times") {
count.wrappedValue += 1
}
}
}
In order to preserve the state, hooks must be called inside a HookScope
.
A view that conforms to the HookView
protocol will automatically be enclosed in a HookScope
.
π’ DO
struct CounterButton: HookView { // π’ `HookView` is used.
var hookBody: some View {
let count = useState(0)
Button("You clicked \(count.wrappedValue) times") {
count.wrappedValue += 1
}
}
}
func counterButton() -> some View {
HookScope { // π’ `HookScope` is used.
let count = useState(0)
Button("You clicked \(count.wrappedValue) times") {
count.wrappedValue += 1
}
}
}
struct ContentView: HookView {
var hookBody: some View {
counterButton()
}
// π’ Called from `HookView.hookBody` or `HookScope`.
@ViewBuilder
var counterButton: some View {
let count = useState(0)
Button("You clicked \(count.wrappedValue) times") {
count.wrappedValue += 1
}
}
}
π΄ DON'T
// π΄ Neither `HookScope` nor `HookView` is used, and is not called from them.
@ViewBuilder
func counterButton() -> some View {
let count = useState(0)
Button("You clicked \(count.wrappedValue) times") {
count.wrappedValue += 1
}
}
See also: Rules of React Hooks
Building your own hooks lets you extract stateful logic into reusable functions.
Hooks are composable since they serve as a stateful functions. So, they can be able to compose with other hooks to create your own custom hook.
In the following example, the most basic useState
and useEffect
are used to make a function provides a current Date
with the specified interval. If the specified interval is changed, Timer.invalidate()
will be called and then a new timer will be activated.
Like this, the stateful logic can be extracted out as a function using Hooks.
func useTimer(interval: TimeInterval) -> Date {
let time = useState(Date())
useEffect(.preserved(by: interval)) {
let timer = Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: interval, repeats: true) {
time.wrappedValue = $0.fireDate
}
return {
timer.invalidate()
}
}
return time.wrappedValue
}
Let's refactor the Example
view at the beginning of the README using this custom hook.
struct Example: HookView {
var hookBody: some View {
let time = useTimer(interval: 1)
Text("Now: \(time)")
}
}
It's so much easier to read and less codes!
Of course the stateful custom hook can be called by arbitrary views.
See also: Building Your Own React Hooks
So far, we have explained that hooks should be called within HookScope
or HookView
. Then, how can the custom hook you have created be tested?
To making unit testing of your custom hooks easy, SwiftUI Hooks provides a simple and complete test utility library.
HookTester
enables unit testing independent of UI of custom hooks by simulating the behavior on the view of a given hook and managing the result values.
Example:
// Your custom hook.
func useCounter() -> (count: Int, increment: () -> Void) {
let count = useState(0)
func increment() {
count.wrappedValue += 1
}
return (count: count.wrappedValue, increment: increment)
}
let tester = HookTester {
useCounter()
}
XCTAssertEqual(tester.value.count, 0)
tester.value.increment()
XCTAssertEqual(tester.value.count, 1)
tester.update() // Simulates view's update.
XCTAssertEqual(tester.value.count, 1)
React has a way to pass data through the component tree without having to pass it down manually, it's called Context
.
Similarly, SwiftUI has EnvironmentValues
to achieve the same, but defining a custom environment value is a bit of a pain, so SwiftUI Hooks provides Context API that a more user-friendly.
This is a simple wrapper around the EnvironmentValues
.
typealias ColorSchemeContext = Context<Binding<ColorScheme>>
struct ContentView: HookView {
var hookBody: some View {
let colorScheme = useState(ColorScheme.light)
ColorSchemeContext.Provider(value: colorScheme) {
darkModeButton
.background(Color(.systemBackground))
.colorScheme(colorScheme.wrappedValue)
}
}
var darkModeButton: some View {
ColorSchemeContext.Consumer { colorScheme in
Button("Use dark mode") {
colorScheme.wrappedValue = .dark
}
}
}
}
And of course, there is a useContext
hook that can be used instead of Context.Consumer
to retrieve the provided value.
@ViewBuilder
var darkModeButton: some View {
let colorScheme = useContext(ColorSchemeContext.self)
Button("Use dark mode") {
colorScheme.wrappedValue = .dark
}
}
See also: React Context