SwiftRunOnce allows a developer to mark a block of logic as "one-time" code – code that will execute at most once over the lifetime of another object, no matter how many times that block of logic gets invoked.
SwiftRunOnce was designed to satisfy five requirements:
- Robust implementation: A block of code to declared to be one-time code must be just that. There may be no circumstance in which the block of code is allowed to execute a second time over the lifetime of the controlling object.
- Declarative usage: One must be able to make a block of preexisting code into one-time code simply by decorating with the attribute.
- Thread safety: Even in multithreaded environments, a block of code marked with the one-time attribute must execute at most once.
- Reentrancy: A block of one-time code must be able to invoke another block of one-time code without deadlocking or invalidating the one-time constraint.
- Minimalist implementation: Adding a block of one-time code requires no additional storage or maintenance of state within the calling code. All state management is hidden and protected.
Swift Package Manager is a tool for managing the distribution of Swift code. It’s integrated with the Swift build system to automate the process of downloading, compiling, and linking dependencies.
Xcode 11+ is required to build SwiftRunOnce using Swift Package Manager.
To integrate SwiftRunOnce into your Xcode project using Swift Package Manager, add it to the dependencies value of your Package.swift
:
dependencies: [
.package(url: "https://github.com/thumbtack/SwiftRunOnce.git", .upToNextMajor(from: "0.2.2"))
]
SwiftRunOnce exposes a single function:
forLifetime(
of object: AnyObject,
_ closure: () -> Void,
line: Int = #line,
column: Int = #column,
fileId: String = #fileID
)
In actual usage, one should always use the default arguments for line
, column
, and fileId
(the behavior when arguments are passed into these parameters is undefined). An example usage might look something like:
func viewDidAppear(animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated: animated)
// Only fire on initial view, not on back navigation
RunOnce.forLifetime(of: self) {
trackView()
}
}
Since most usages of forLifetime(of::)
will pass self
as the object, SwiftRunOnce adds a convenience extension to NSObject
that adds a little more syntactic sugar to this common case. Using that extension, the above code simply becomes:
func viewDidAppear(animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated: animated)
// Only fire on initial view, not on back navigation
runOnce {
trackView()
}
}
SwiftRunOnce is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE for the full license text.