TestsTested | ✗ |
LangLanguage | Obj-CObjective C |
License | MIT |
ReleasedLast Release | Dec 2014 |
Maintained by Unclaimed.
Jastor is an Objective-C base class that is initialized with a dictionary (probably from your JSON response), and assigns dictionary values to all its (derived class's) typed @properties.
It supports nested types, arrays, NSString, NSNumber, NSDate and more.
Jastor is NOT a JSON parser. For that, you have JSONKit, yajl and many others.
The name sounds like JSON to Objecter. Or something.
Upgrade from previous version:
Add dealloc
mehtods to your models and nillify your peoperties. Automattic dealloc
is no longer done by Jastor.
Need help with getting Jastor up and running? Got a time-consuming problem you want to get solved quickly?
Get Jastor support on CodersClan.
You have the following JSON:
{
"name": "Foo",
"amount": 13
}
and the following class:
@interface Product
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSString *name;
@property (nonatomic, retain) NSNumber *amount;
@end
@implementation Product
@synthesize name, amount;
- (void)dealloc {
self.name = nil;
self.amount = nil;
[super dealloc];
}
@end
with Jastor, you can just inherit from Jastor
class, and use initWithDictionary:
// Product.h
@interface Product : Jastor
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSString *name;
@property (nonatomic, retain) NSNumber *amount;
@end
// Product.m
@implementation Product
@synthesize name, amount;
- (void)dealloc {
self.name = nil;
self.amount = nil;
[super dealloc];
}
@end
// Some other code
NSDictionary *dictionary = /* parse the JSON response to a dictionary */;
Product *product = [[Product alloc] initWithDictionary:dictionary];
// Log
product.name // => Foo
product.amount // => 13
Jastor also converts nested objects to their destination type:
// JSON
{
"name": "Foo",
"category": {
"name": "Bar Category"
}
}
// ProductCategory.h
@interface ProductCategory : Jastor
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSString *name;
@end
// ProductCategory.m
@implementation ProductCategory
@synthesize name;
- (void)dealloc {
self.name = nil;
[super dealloc];
}
@end
// Product.h
@interface Product : Jastor
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSString *name;
@property (nonatomic, retain) ProductCategory *category;
@end
// Product.m
@implementation Product
@synthesize name, category;
- (void)dealloc {
self.name = nil;
self.category = nil;
[super dealloc];
}
@end
// Code
NSDictionary *dictionary = /* parse the JSON response to a dictionary */;
Product *product = [[Product alloc] initWithDictionary:dictionary];
// Log
product.name // => Foo
product.category // => <ProductCategory>
product.category.name // => Bar Category
Having fun so far?
Jastor also supports arrays of a certain type:
// JSON
{
"name": "Foo",
"categories": [
{ "name": "Bar Category 1" },
{ "name": "Bar Category 2" },
{ "name": "Bar Category 3" }
]
}
// ProductCategory.h
@interface ProductCategory : Jastor
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSString *name;
@end
// ProductCategory.m
@implementation ProductCategory
@synthesize name;
- (void)dealloc {
self.name = nil;
[super dealloc];
}
@end
// Product.h
@interface Product : Jastor
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSString *name;
@property (nonatomic, retain) NSArray *categories;
@end
// Product.m
@implementation Product
@synthesize name, categories;
+ (Class)categories_class {
return [ProductCategory class];
}
- (void)dealloc {
self.name = nil;
self.categories = nil;
[super dealloc];
}
@end
// Code
NSDictionary *dictionary = /* parse the JSON response to a dictionary */;
Product *product = [[Product alloc] initWithDictionary:dictionary];
// Log
product.name // => Foo
product.categories // => <NSArray>
[product.categories count] // => 3
[product.categories objectAtIndex:1] // => <ProductCategory>
[[product.categories objectAtIndex:1] name] // => Bar Category 2
Notice the declaration of
+ (Class)categories_class {
return [ProductCategory class];
}
it tells Jastor what class of items the array holds.
Jastor can handle trees of data:
// JSON
{
"name": "1",
"children": [
{ "name": "1.1" },
{ "name": "1.2",
children: [
{ "name": "1.2.1",
children: [
{ "name": "1.2.1.1" },
{ "name": "1.2.1.2" },
]
},
{ "name": "1.2.2" },
]
},
{ "name": "1.3" }
]
}
// ProductCategory.h
@interface ProductCategory : Jastor
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSString *name;
@property (nonatomic, retain) NSArray *children;
@end
// ProductCategory.m
@implementation ProductCategory
@synthesize name, children;
+ (Class)children_class {
return [ProductCategory class];
}
- (void)dealloc {
self.name = nil;
self.children = nil;
[super dealloc];
}
@end
// Code
NSDictionary *dictionary = /* parse the JSON response to a dictionary */;
ProductCategory *category = [[ProductCategory alloc] initWithDictionary:dictionary];
// Log
category.name // => 1
category.children // => <NSArray>
[category.children count] // => 3
[category.children objectAtIndex:1] // => <ProductCategory>
[[category.categories objectAtIndex:1] name] // => 1.2
[[[category.children objectAtIndex:1] children] objectAtIndex:0] // => <ProductCategory>
[[[[category.children objectAtIndex:1] children] objectAtIndex:0] name] // => 1.2.1.2
Runtime API. The class's properties are read in runtime and assigns all values from dictionary to these properties with NSObject setValue:forKey:
. For Dictionaries, Jastor instantiates a new class, based on the property type, and issues another initWithDictionary
. Arrays are only a list of items such as strings (which are not converted) or dictionaries (which are treated the same as other dictionaries).
Just copy Jastor.m+.h and JastorRuntimeHelper.m+.h to your project, create a class, inherit, use the initWithDictionary
and enjoy!
Make sure to initialize git submodules.
git submodules init
git submodules update
In Xcode, hit CMD+U under iPhone simulator scheme.
What about properties that are reserved words?
As for now, id
is converted to objectId
automatically. Maybe someday Jastor will have ability to map server and obj-c fields.
Jastor classes also conforms to NSCoding protocol
So you get initWithCoder
/encodeWithCoder
for free.
You can look at the tests for real samples.
NSManageObject
s