SwiftyHaru 0.3.0

SwiftyHaru 0.3.0

TestsTested
LangLanguage CC
License MIT
ReleasedLast Release Dec 2018
SPMSupports SPM

Maintained by Sergej Jaskiewicz.



SwiftyHaru

Build Status codecov documentation Language Platform Cocoapods

SwiftyHaru is an object-oriented Swift wrapper for LibHaru, a C library for creating PDF documents. It brings the safety of Swift to the process of creating PDFs on different platforms like Linux, macOS, iOS, watchOS and tvOS.

Check out which features of LibHaru has already been implemented in FEATURES.md

Requirements

  • Swift 4.2+
  • iOS 8.0+
  • macOS 10.10+
  • tvOS 9.0+
  • watchOS 2.0+
  • Ubuntu 14.04+

Installation

CocoaPods

For the latest release in CocoaPods add the following to your Podfile:

use_frameworks!

pod 'SwiftyHaru'

For the latest dev build:

use_frameworks!

pod 'SwiftyHaru', :git => 'https://github.com/WeirdMath/SwiftyHaru.git', :branch => 'dev'

Swift Package Manager

Add SwiftyHaru as a dependency to your Package.swift. For example:

let package = Package(
    name: "YourPackageName",
    dependencies: [
        .package(url: "https://github.com/WeirdMath/SwiftyHaru.git", from: "0.3.0")
    ]
)

Important: when building your project that has SwiftyHaru as a dependency, you need to pass the -Xlinker -lz flags to the compiler. This is because SwiftyHaru has to be linked with zlib (which must be intalled on your computer). For example:

$ swift build -Xlinker -lz
$ swift test -Xlinker -lz

Documentation

Available here.

Getting started

import SwiftyHaru

// Initialize stuff
let document = PDFDocument()

try document.addPage(width: 600, height: 400) { context in

    // Construct a path
    let path = Path()
        .moving(toX: 100, y: 100)
        .appendingLine(toX: 400, y: 100)
        .moving(toX: 500, y: 200)
        .appendingArc(x: 400, y: 200, radius: 100, beginningAngle: 90, endAngle: 180)
        .appendingCircle(x: 200, y: 200, radius: 50)
        .moving(toX: 500, y: 200)
        .appendingCurve(controlPoint1: Point(x: 400, y: 200),
                        controlPoint2: Point(x: 400, y: 300),
                        endPoint: Point(x: 500, y: 300))
        .closingSubpath()

    // Paint the path
    context.strokeColor = .blue
    context.stroke(path)

    // Put some text
    context.textLeading = 11
    try context.show(text: "Roses are red,\nViolets are blue,\nSugar is sweet,\nAnd so are you.",
                     atX: 300, y: 200)
}

Contributing

Building:

$ make debug

Or:

$ make release

Testing:

$ make test

Generating Xcode project

Since the Xcode project is explicitly gitignored, you might want to generate it in order to make development comfortable for you. This can be accomplished by running the following command:

make generate-xcodeproj