AlertKit is a lightweight library which makes SwiftUI alert and action sheet presentation super easy to use.
Using Swift Package Manager, add it as a Swift Package in Xcode 11.0 or later, select File > Swift Packages > Add Package Dependency... and add the repository URL:
https://github.com/rebeloper/AlertKit.gitDownload and include the AlertKit folder and files in your codebase.
- iOS 14+
- Swift 5
Import AlertKit into your View
import AlertKitHere's the list of the awesome features AlertKit has:
- programatic way to show
Alerts in SwiftUI - you don't have to add
Alerts as view modifiers any more - supports
Action Sheets - blends in perfectly with all other SwiftUI functioanlity and principles
In SwiftUI alerts are added as view modifiers with a bit of help from @State:
struct ContentView: View {
@State private var isSwiftUIAlertPresented = false
var body: some View {
VStack {
Button("SwiftUI Alert") {
isSwiftUIAlertPresented = true
}.alert(isPresented: $isSwiftUIAlertPresented) {
Alert(title: Text("SwiftUI Alert"))
}
Spacer()
}
}
This will get ugly really quickly if you're trying to add multiple Alerts on a view. Lots of @States with Alerts scattered all around your view π€
With AlertKit you can invoke an Alert as simple as calling:
alertManager.show(dismiss: .success(message: "AlertKit is awesome"))Using AlertKit is super simple:
- create a
@StateObjectvariable ofAlertManager() - add the
.uses(_:)view-modifier - show an alert π€©
import AlertKit
struct ContentView: View {
// 1.
@StateObject var alertManager = AlertManager()
var body: some View {
VStack {
Button("Show Dismiss Alert") {
// 3.
alertManager.show(dismiss: .success(message: "AlertKit is awesome"))
}
}
.uses(alertManager) // 2.
}
}There are two types of alerts in SwiftUI. The Dismiss Alert is one of them. It presents an alert with:
- title
- message
- one button (dismiss)
alertManager.show(dismiss: .success(message: "AlertKit is awesome"))AlertKit comes with some predifined helpers to make your life easier. In all of the above the only variable is the meassage. Title and button(s) are predifined if that is the case. Of course you may override any or all of them if you wish.
Important: Make sure that you use the dismiss ones with the dismiss alert and the primarySeconday with the primarySecoondary alert.
alertManager.show(dismiss: .custom(title: "AlertKit", message: "AlertKit is awesome", dismissButton: .cancel()))
alertManager.show(dismiss: .success(message: "AlertKit is awesome"))
alertManager.show(dismiss: .error(message: "AlertKit is awesome"))
alertManager.show(dismiss: .warning(message: "AlertKit is awesome"))
alertManager.show(dismiss: .info(message: "AlertKit is awesome"))The second type of alert displayes two buttons (instead of one):
- title
- message
- two buttons (primary and secondary)
Here are the ways you may call it:
alertManager.show(primarySecondary: .custom(title: "AlertKit", message: "AlertKit is awesome", primaryButton: Alert.Button.destructive(Text("OK")), secondaryButton: Alert.Button.cancel()))
alertManager.show(primarySecondary: .success(title: "AlertKit", message: "AlertKit is awesome", primaryButton: Alert.Button.destructive(Text("OK")), secondaryButton: Alert.Button.cancel()))
alertManager.show(primarySecondary: .error(title: "AlertKit", message: "AlertKit is awesome", primaryButton: Alert.Button.destructive(Text("OK")), secondaryButton: Alert.Button.cancel()))
alertManager.show(primarySecondary: .warning(title: "AlertKit", message: "AlertKit is awesome", primaryButton: Alert.Button.destructive(Text("OK")), secondaryButton: Alert.Button.cancel()))
alertManager.show(primarySecondary: .info(title: "AlertKit", message: "AlertKit is awesome", primaryButton: Alert.Button.destructive(Text("OK")), secondaryButton: Alert.Button.cancel()))Want more than two buttons on the Alert? Well, you will have to use an Action Sheet:
Button("Show Action Sheet") {
let buttons: [ActionSheet.Button] = [
.destructive(Text("Do some work"), action: {
fetchData()
}),
.default(Text("Nothing")),
.cancel()
]
alertManager.showActionSheet(.custom(title: "Action Sheet", message: "What do you want to do next?", buttons: buttons))
}
...
func fetchData {
...
}Note that you can use all of the Alert.Buttons SwiftUI provides. Here I'm using a destructive with action button and have wrapped the actual work into a seperate fetchData() function. Cleaner code π
Speaking of clean code... I highly recommend using a view model for your view. Here's mine that is simulating fetching some data by simply letting time pass:
//
// ContentViewModel.swift
//
import SwiftUI
class ContentViewModel: ObservableObject {
func fetchData(completion: @escaping (Result<Bool, Error>) -> ()) {
DispatchQueue.global(qos: .background).asyncAfter(deadline: .now() + 4) {
DispatchQueue.main.async {
// completion(.success(true))
completion(.success(false))
// completion(.failure(NSError(domain: "Could not fetch data", code: 404, userInfo: nil)))
}
}
}
}And in my ContentView I'm using it like so:
//
// ContentView.swift
//
import SwiftUI
import AlertKit
struct ContentView: View {
@StateObject var alertManager = AlertManager()
@ObservedObject private var viewModel = ContentViewModel()
var body: some View {
VStack {
...
}
.uses(alertManager)
.onAppear {
fetchData()
}
}
func fetchData() {
// to see all cases please modify the Result in ContentViewModel
self.viewModel.fetchData { (result) in
switch result {
case .success(let finished):
if finished {
alertManager.show(dismiss: .info(message: "Successfully fetched data", dismissButton: Alert.Button.default(Text("Alright"))))
} else {
alertManager.show(primarySecondary: .error(title: "π€", message: "Something went wrong", primaryButton: Alert.Button.default(Text("Try again"), action: {
fetchData()
}), secondaryButton: .cancel()))
}
case .failure(let err):
alertManager.show(dismiss: .error(message: err.localizedDescription))
}
}
}
}Custom alerts are different as they have a few more steps to set up.
- Declare one ore more
CustomAlertManagers:
@StateObject var customAlertManager = CustomAlertManager()
@StateObject var customAlertManager2 = CustomAlertManager()You have to declare one for each custom alert that you want to present.
- Optionally, if you are using
TextFields you have to set a@Statevariable that will hold the text value
@State private var customAlertText: String = ""- Set up the custom alert on the root View:
VStack {
...
}
.customAlert(manager: customAlertManager, content: {
VStack {
Text("Hello Custom Alert").bold()
TextField("Enter email", text: $customAlertText).textFieldStyle(RoundedBorderTextFieldStyle())
}
}, buttons: [
.cancel(content: {
Text("Cancel").bold()
}),
.regular(content: {
Text("Send")
}, action: {
print("Sending email: \(customAlertText)")
})
])You may add any View as the content of your custom alert. You have two button types:
.regularhas an action; it dismisses the alert with that action.cancelhas only content and no action; it dismisses the alert without any action
.customAlert(manager: customAlertManager2, content: {
VStack(spacing: 12) {
Text("Hello Custom Alert 2").bold()
Text("Some message here")
}
}, buttons: [
.regular(content: {
Text("Go")
}, action: {
print("Go")
}),
.cancel(content: {
Image(systemName: "bell.slash.fill").resizable().frame(width: 33, height: 33).foregroundColor(Color(.systemPurple))
}),
.cancel(content: {
Text("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.").bold()
})
])IMPORTANT: You must provide at least one button!
- Triger the custom alert(s):
VStack {
...
Button(action: {
customAlertManager.show()
}, label: {
Text("Show custom alert")
})
Button(action: {
customAlertManager2.show()
}, label: {
Text("Show custom alert 2")
})
}For a comprehensive Demo project check out: AlertKitDemo
rebeloper.com / YouTube / Shop / Mentoring
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