It's been a while since I posted an update here, and I wanted to announce a new project: a WriteFreely Swift package that you can drop into your Mac and iOS apps.
You can find it here: https://github.com/writeas/writefreely-swift
What's WriteFreely?
WriteFreely is an open-source platform for writing on the web. It powers the Write.as service (find me here!), and lets you build writing communities on the web.
I was introduced to Write.as and WriteFreely while working with Glitch, where I got to chat about the service and its principles with Matt and CJ. Matt wrote a thoughtful post on Glimmer about the importance of privacy for creating on the web, and CJ built a tonne of cool sample apps that connected to the Write.as service for their Glitch team.
Cool, Tell Me More About The Project
This project represents a couple of firsts for me:
- This is the first time I've worked on a Swift package
- This is the first time I've wrapped a RESTful API in Swift
- This is the first time I've worked with
URLSession
andResult
in Swift
Right now, it's an alpha/developer-preview release. There's a lot of room for improvement here, and I'm looking forward to working towards a 1.0 with the WF community.
As I mention in this forum topic and my Write.as post, the design for the WriteFreelyClient
is to leverage completion blocks that return a Result
tuple with either a User
, Post
, or Collection
(or an array of these types where that makes sense), or an Error
on failure. That makes it pretty easy to build completion handlers:
func loginHandler(result: (Result<User, Error>)) {
do {
let user = try result.get()
print("Hello, \(user.username)!")
} catch {
print(error)
}
}
guard let url = URL(string: "https://your.writefreely.host/") else { fatalError() }
let client = WriteFreelyClient(for: url)
client.login(username: "username", password: "password", completion: loginHandler)
What's Next For The Project?
Good question! There are definitely some major to-do items that are obvious to me:
- Add a test suite (there will be some refactoring required to facilitate this)
- Create generic-ish request templates to DRY out the
WriteFreelyClient
public methods - Extend for use with the Write.as platform
Mostly, though, I'm excited for people to try it out and let me know how it works for them!
Top comments (0)