How can I build an Objective-C static library to distribute as a single binary and header file? - objective-c

I'm building a static library, MyLibrary, for iOS in Objective-C that bundles together a dozen useful classes, each with its own .h file. I'd like to distribute MyLibrary as a single compiled binary, libMyLibrary.a, and a single .h header file, MyLibraryAPI.h. MyLibraryAPI.h has a dozen #import statements, one for each of MyLibrary's dozen public classes. Developers who want to include MyLibrary in their host projects should only have to include the libMyLibrary.a binary and the MyLibraryAPI.h header. This is the goal.
So I have set the Role of each public class in the MyLibrary Xcode project to Public and built libMyLibrary.a successfully using Xcode command line build utils and lipo. Then, I manually included all of the dozen MyLibrary header files along with libMyLibrary.a in a host project, and the host project can use the public MyLibrary classes with no problem. Awesome!
The problem is if I remove those dozen header files and use MyLibraryAPI.h instead (as is my goal), the host project's classes can no longer find the MyLibrary header files referenced in MyLibraryAPI.h. Instead, at compile time, I get errors like: MyAwesomeThingDelegate.h: No such file or directory... for each MyLibrary class that I try to #import in MyLibraryAPI.h. I have a folder in my host project root directory called lib and in host project build settings have set the recursive header search path to lib/** and in Library Search Path, set a recursive path to lib/**.
I'd love to hear suggestions from the community on how to correctly set the host project's search paths so that I only need to include libMyLibrary.a and MyLibraryAPI.h to use the MyLibrary classes. Or if I'm doing something wrong, I'd love to hear another suggestion to achieve my goal of distributing a single binary and a single API header file.

I've had the same challenge and I've come with the following solution:
First, I tried to hide as many implementation details as possible. For that reason, I usually built pairs of classes: one class is the public interface and the other one the private implementation. The public class has only one member instance: the pointer to the implementation. The private class has just a forward declaration.
#class MyViewImpl;
#interface MyView : UIView
{
#private
MyViewImpl* _internal;
}
#property (nonatomic, assign) CGRect highlightArea;
- (void) startAnimation;
#end
Second, I put all the public declarations into a single header file. It's as comfortable to work with as with separate header file, but it works. The only imports that are left, are import of iOS stuff, such as:
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>

I'm giving a second answer here with a different approach.
The way Objective C works is, that the compiler needs the full declaration (i.e. the header files) of all the classes that the users of your library will directly call. The library file (the .a file) only contains the compiled code and no declaration. It will only be used by the linker, which is one of the last steps of building an application.
[Programming languages like C or C++ are the same. Programming languages like Java or C# however store meta information about classes in the compiled code so they don't need no header files, just the .jar or .dll file.]
So one approach would be to give the .a and a directory full of header files to your user. They then add the .a file to their project, add a single #import statement wherever they use your classes and add the path to the header file directory to their build settings (it's called Header Search Paths).

Related

Adding objective c class that uses swift classes to bridging header Projectname_swift.h not found

I have an objective-c class that uses swift classes. It all works fine.
I wanted to import the objective-c class into a swift class, so I added its header file to the bridging header. All the sudden I got an error the Projectname_swift.h file is not found.
Any ideas how to resolve this issue?
Is it actually possible?
a circular reference has been created, making it so the Swift code is unable to compile (which leads to the canary error stating that the _Swift.h file is not found).
i have provided a more in depth answer to a similar questions here and here.
long story short, the documentation explicitly says not to this:
To avoid cyclical references, don’t import Swift code into an Objective-C header (.h) file. Instead, you can forward declare a Swift class or protocol to reference it in an Objective-C interface.
Forward declarations of Swift classes and protocols can only be used as types for method and property declarations.
in order to make your code compile again you will need to remove the #import "Projectname_Swift.h" line from the offending Objective-C header. ideally you can simply move the import statement into your .m file, however if you need to publicly expose the Swift class in your ObjC header, then you must forward declare it using #class SomeSwiftClass;.
Let the Xcode build the bridge file from Objective-C to Swift.
Create a temporary directory elsewhere. In there, you create a dummy Xcode Swift project, give the project name the same as your existing Current Project Name.
Then add new file, Objective-C (.m file). The XCode will prompt you to create a bridge header file, click on the create bridge file (the right most button).
Now you locate the header file location in Finder. Then drag into your Current Project of Interest, don't forget to checked the copy file if necessary option. Add necessary #import '.....' in the header file.
You should be good. If everything works fine, delete the dummy project.
Clean derived data. and then #import "ProjectName-Swift.h" in your objective c files.
Go to
Build Settings->Objective-C Generated Interface Header Name
and set the value to YourModule-Swift.h (this is usually already set, this is the filename you need to import on .m file #import "YourModule-Swift.h"
Go to Build Settings and search for "Defines Module", set both values to YES
Create a class in swift with prefix of #objc for example
#objc class mySwiftClass{...}
Build the project again
it will be better if you use error syntax or screen shot. you can simply try this
1. Goto your project on top of right navigation
2. select build settings from middle pain.
3. search for Objective-C bridging header
4. just below this you will find "Generated interface HeaderName"
5. add correct address of your swift file
6. clean and build the project.

Adding Swift Class to Objective-C Project with Multiple Targets

I have an existing Obj-C project that houses many targets that all share the same AppDelegate. I want to bridge a swift class that is used by select targets. I can do this easily when I have one target.
When I add a swift file to the project, I select the desired targets and the necessary bridging-header.h files are generated, but when I try to import those -swift.h files, they are can't be found.
Are there steps I'm missing when it comes to projects that have multiple build targets?
EDIT - More Details
I wanted to add a little bit more detail on how my project is set up.
I have a Framework, we'll call it AppFactory, coded in Obj-C. I have multiple build targets that generate different versions of the Core app depending on information in that target's plist. I want a swift file to be utilized by these apps. In my build settings the Defines Module is marked to Yes, I have create this swift class:
#objec class SwiftClass: NSObject { }
And in doing that, Xcode generated the proper Briding-Header.h files.
According to Apple Guides when you have multiple build targets your import header should include the ProductName/ProductModuleName-Swift.h, which should be auto generated by Xcode.
When I look in to my derived data folder, the ProductModuleName-Swift.h does exist, with in each targets build folder, under the AppFactoryCore folder.
I found a solution to my problem.
Swift File Targets:
Instead of having SwiftClass.swift target both the framework and the selected targets (AppA, AppB & AppC), I backpedaled and solely targeted the framework, AppFactoryCore.
Build Settings (Packaging > Defines Module):
I reverted each app target's Defines Module property from YES to NO, and set this property to YES for the framework target.
Swift Class Declaration:
The guide states:
Because the generated header for a framework target is part of the framework’s public interface, only declarations marked with the public or open modifier appear in the generated header for a framework target.
So I added access control modifiers to my class and class functions
#objc open class SwiftClass: NSObject {
//Code
}
Import Header:
Since SwiftClass.swift is only targeting the framework target, and it is in fact a framework that is being used, the header import SwiftClass.swift into the universal AppDelegate was
#import <AppFactoryCore/AppFactoryCore-Swift.h>
Which finally became visible once all previously stated modifications were done.
Now that the file is global to all targets I added a custom attribute to identify if the target running was is one that should utilize SwiftClass.swift.
Hope this helps anyone else trying to accomplish a relatively similar task!

How do .swift files keep the 'privacy' which the .h and .m files did in Obj-C

I have just started to shift from Obj-C to Swift in Xcode.
My question is about the new .swift files which replace the .h and .m files. The answers to this question partially tells me the differences, but I am still puzzled by the issue of 'privacy' with the new .swift file.
If I look up the definition of a class in Obj-C, I will be only be able to view the .h file (#interface) which contains the declaration of the class, its variables and methods. I cannot view the .m file (#implementation) which contains the code which controls how the class works (they are private which stops others from seeing/possibly plagiarising your code, I guess).
However, in Swift, it seems that something such as:
class NewClass: ParentClass {...}
creates a class in one go without the need for 2 sections - the #interface and #implementation. But when I look up the definition of a class (say, SKScene) in Swift, the code for the methods, etc, are still kept private somehow... How is this done?
The same situation in which you only see header files (e.g. a pre-compiled framework) will, with Swift, only make the interface available. The Swift files themselves will not be included in the framework. Instead, Xcode will generate pseudo-interface files that will be visible to users of the framework. You get property definitions and method signatures, but no implementations.

Swift to Objective-C header not created in Xcode 6

I have recently been working to add Swift to an existing project, to get to try it out in a real-world fashion.
Upon adding a Swift source file to the project, I have no problems about getting the "Bridging Header", that is, Objective-C to Swift.
But the *-Swift.h header file that is supposed to expose Swift classes either marked #objc or subclasses of ObjC classes, is nowhere to be found :-(
I don't see any specific instructions on how to accomplish the usage of my new subclass, written in Swift, in my main app code (which is still Objective-C).
The app that I am lead developer of has a fairly large codebase (70.000 lines), so transitioning it in one go is out of the question.
Now it works.
Project must have a Product Module Name that does not include spaces.
Defines Module must be set to Yes in Build Settings, under Packaging.
Finally works. Thanks to everyone for the help :-)
I had a similar problem and found that you can only add
#import "ProductModuleName-Swift.h"
to obj-c .m files, not .h files for the umbrella header to be found
I found that I had to fix all build errors before it would generate the file.
The problem for me was that it was a chicken/egg problem, in that I didn't see any build errors until I'd actually commented out the #import statement:
//#import "ProductModuleName-Swift.h"
which revealed a bunch of other errors in my Swift code.
Once I fixed these new errors and got the source building successfully, I uncommented out the #import and bingo! The header was created and importing correctly :)
If you're like me you've probably got the header name wrong. After bashing my head for a while I looked for the file in DerivedData and sure enough it's there. On my setup (using the standard derived data folder, I believe):
cd ~/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData
find * -iname '*Swift.h'
Will find it. If nothing in that folder matches then Xcode is not generating it.
I'm using Xcode Version 6.2 (6C86e)
If your project module name has spaces in it, you must replace the spaces with an underscore.
For instance, if your project name is "My Project", you would use:
#import "My_Project-Swift.h"
* The only important thing is: *
to use the defined "Product Module Name" in the target, followed by -Swift.h
#import <Product Module Name>-Swift.h
// in each ObjectiveC .m file having to use swift classes
// no matter in which swift files these classes sit.
No matter if "Defines Module" param is set to Yes or No or if "Product Module Name" Project is not set.
Reminder: Swift classes must deriving from NSObject or been tagged with #objc attribute in order to be exposed to ObjectiveC / Foundation || Cocoa ...
I wanted to add one more reason you might find an issue with this - I was creating a framework that mixed Swift and Objective-C code. I was not able to import the Swift classes outside the framework - I checked for the -Swift.h file and it was being generated but was empty.
The problem turned out to be very, very simple - I had not declared any of my Swift classes public! As soon as I added the public keyword to the classes, I was able to use them from classes inside and outside the framework.
Also of note, inside the framework (inside .m files only as another answer mentions) I had to import the -Swift.h file as:
#import <FrameworkName/FrameworkName-Swift.h>
I had the same problem. Seems like you have to adjust the settings (Defines Module and Product Module Name) before you add your first Swift file.
If you do it afterwards the "*-Swift.h" file will not be generated for this project even if you add further Swift files or delete the Swift file and create a new one.
Allow me to share my experiences trying to use Swift in an old objc project. I did not have to set Defines module to YES.
In my case I needed to manually make sure there was an objc Bridging Header. Only the generated interface header name was present in my build settings.
This lead to a MyApp-Swift.h file to being generated, but without any traces of my Swift classes.
The Apple documentation says that you will be prompted to create a bridging header when adding your first swift file. Well, I wasn't. I manually added a MyApp-Bridging-header.h file and pointed to it in the "Objective-C Bridging Header" field. That made my MyApp-Swift.h file become populated with my Swift classes.
Docs: Importing Swift into Objective-C
Here is another variation of the moduleName-Swift.h not being generated.
I decided to include IOS Charts in my project but did not want to mingle the sources in the same directory, so I placed the Charts Project folder next to my code's project folder. I dragged the Charts project into my Project's Navigator Bar and included the framework in the my project target's Embedded Binaries list in the General project settings and set the Embedded Content Contains Swift Code switch to yes in my project's Build Settings tab in the Build Options section.
My project's moduleName-Swift.h file would never generate no matter what other switches or settings suggested here. Finally, using Lou Z's method of seeking out the -Swift.h files, I saw that a Charts-Swift.h file was being generated deep in my project's xcode Build directory in Charts.framework/Headers/
The solution to using Daniel Gindi's ios-charts Swift package without including the code in my project's source directory was to add:
#import "Charts/Charts-Swift.h"
To the modules charting my project's data.
The file name is always preceded by your Target name. It is referred as Product name but practically it is the target name.
So if you want it to build for a new target be ready to expect that_target-Swift.h file.
One way to handle this is
Add a preprocessor for each of your target that is the name of your target itself (without spaces). Ex. MY_TARGET=1. Add this in Project settings->Build Settings->Preprocessor Macros for each of your targets.
If you are using a PCH file,
Add these lines in the PCH file
#if MY_TARGET==1
#include "My_Target-Swift.h"
#elif THAT_TARGET==1
#include "That_Target-Swift.h"
#endif
Advantage of using PCH file is that you don't have to include the headers everywhere.
If you are not using a PCH file, just add these same lines in a single header and include that header wherever you need to use the swift classes.
This should work just fine.
If Xcode is actually generating your -Swift.h header (deep inside DerivedData) but it doesn't refer to your Swift classes, make sure you also have a bridging header defined. The way I read the docs implied I only needed that for calling Objective-C from Swift, but it seems to be necessary for calling Swift from Objective-C too.
See my answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/27972946/337392
EDIT: It is because of public vs. internal access modifiers, as I eventually found explained in the Apple docs:-
By default, the generated header contains interfaces for Swift
declarations marked with the public modifier. It also contains those
marked with the internal modifier if your app target has an
Objective-C bridging header.
Seconding what a lot of people have here, but adding a pertinent screen shot. Swift and Obj-C code can certainly live together. It's not an all or none game.
To access Swift files in your Objective-C, all you need to do is add this call to your Obj-C file (in the .m / implementation file):
#import "{product_module_name}-Swift.h"
(Where {product_module_name} represents the product module name of your project). Rather than try to guess your product module name or figure out corner cases with spaces and special characters, just go to the build settings tab in the project and type in "product module name" - the inspector will reveal yours to you. Mine was something I did not expect it to be. Check out this screen shot if you're confused.
And to get Obj-c code working in Swift, you just need to add a bridging header file and import the relevant Obj-C headers there.
This answer addresses the use-case where you may already have some Objective-C code that calls Swift classes and then you start receiving this error.
How To Fix Issue
The following steps ultimately resolved all of the issues for me. I read above someone mentioning the "chicken and the egg" and it is exactly that concept which led me to this procedure. This explicit process shows that one has to remove any Objective-C code referencing Swift classes until after the header is generated.
Comment out the #import "ProductModuleName-Swift.h" statement in
your Objective-C implementation file
Comment out any references in the Objective-C implementation file to
Swift Classes
Clean & Build
Resolve all errors/warnings
Remove the comment on the #import "ProductModuleName-Swift.h" statement
Clean & build (successfully or fix any remaining errors, verify that you are not referencing any Swift classes in Objective-C at this point. If so temporarily comment these out)
Verify that "ProductModuleName-Swift.h" is generated by Cmd-Clicking
on the class name of the #import "ProductModuleName-Swift.h" statement
Remove the comment on the code referencing Swift classes in the Objective-C implementation file.
Clean & Build as normal (the "ProductModuleName-Swift.h" should be
generated and your Objective-C code referencing Swift Classes can be
used as normal)
Nota Bene: The answers about changing spaces to underscores and the Defines Module to YES as given above still applies when performing this process, as do the rules specified in the Apple Documentation.
Bridging Header Path
In one error, the file ProductModuleName-Bridging-Header.h was not being found during the build process. This fact generated an error
< unknown>:0: error: bridging header
'/Users/Shared/Working/abc/abc-Bridging-Header.h' does not exist
Closer inspection of the error indicated that the file would never exist at the location described because it was actually located at (a wrong path)
'/Users/Shared/Working/abc/abc/abc-Bridging-Header.h'. a quick search of the target/projects build settings to make the correction manually and the abc-Swift.h file was again auto generated.
Ok, here are all the things you really need!
1.Remove all the swift files you have added, and compile the code, without any errors.
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2.Go to the "Projects" build settings, and set the product module name.
Project must have a Product Module Name that does not include spaces.
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3.Defines Module must be set to Yes in Build Settings, under Packaging, in your project, and not target!
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4.Now create a swift file or a view controller, in file-> newFile->
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It will ask to create a bridging-header, allow it to make one.
If you have declined it once, you will have to manually add a -Bridging-Header.h
5.Add #objc in the controller, to tell the compiler that there is some swift file, which needs to be exposed to ObjectiveC
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6.Build the project and import #import "-Swift.h" in any of the objectiveC controller, and it will work! You can Command-click on it to see the actual file!
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Hope this helps!
The most important thing is that This file is invisible!!! At least it is in Xcode6 beta5. There will be no such file named "YourModule-Swift.h" in your workspace. Just make sure you have module name and defines module set to yes, and use it in your Objective-C class.
You have to import a header in Objective-C classes, which is:
#import “ProductModuleName-Swift.h”
It is automatically generated, on the reference it says "Any Swift files in your target will be visible in Objective-C .m files containing this import statement."
An actual file in the project is not created ([ProductModuleName]-Swift.h). Cmd + Click on the import either generates it on-the-fly (and in-memory) so you can see how the linkage is done, or opens a file somewhere in some Xcode cache dir, but it's not in the project dir.
You need to set Defines Module project prop (in target's Build Settings) to Yes and if your module name has spaces or dashes - use _ in all imports of the [ProductModuleName]-Swift.h file.
You can import it in all .h and .m files where you use swift types or you can import it in the .pch.
So if my Module (project) is named "Test Project", I would import it like this, in the .pch file of my project (just there):
#import "Test_Project-Swift.h"
Just a heads up for anyone who used "." in there project name. Xcode will replace the "." with an underscore "_" for the Swift version of the bridging header file. Oddly enough the Bridging-Header.h that is generated does not replace the periods with underscores.
For example a project with the name My.Project would have the following Bridging Header file names.
Bridging-Header.h (Autogenerated)
My.Project-Bridging-Header.h
Swift.h
My_Project.h
I hope this helps anyone who used a period and was stuck like I was. This file can be found at the following location.
Macintosh HD/Users/user/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/My.Project-fntdulwpbhbbzdbyrkhanemcrfil/Build/Intermediates/My.Project.build/Debug-iphonesimulator/My.Project.build/DerivedSources
Take care,
Jon
Project must have a Module Name not including spaces.
Defines Module must be set to Yes in Build Settings, under Packaging.
commented out the #import statement:
If still you are having error in importing "ProductModuleName-Swift.h" then
//#import "ProductModuleName-Swift.h"
which revealed a bunch of other errors in my Swift code.
Once I fixed these new errors and got the source building successfully, I uncommented out the #import and bingo! The header was created and importing correctly :)
I found a trick that always works on me.
Create your #import "ProductModuleName-Swift.h" in your appDelegate.h file and in your ProductName-Prefix.pch file. If you don't have it in xcode 6 you can create it with this way Why isn't ProjectName-Prefix.pch created automatically in Xcode 6?
Command+shift+k to clean your code, if you receive an error about your "ProductModuleName-Swift.h" delete it from appDelegate.h file.
Clean your code again. Now everything will work like a charm
If you receive again error about the "ProductModuleName-Swift.h", now create again in appDelegate.h file and clean your code again.
Do this work (delete and create the "ProductModuleName-Swift.h" from appDelegate.h file and clean your code) everytime you receive this error to silent it.
I Found this solution
Create SwiftBridge.h
put #import “ProductModuleName-Swift.h”
Make this .h file public (important) Select the file -> In Show the file Inspector (right bar) -> Make it public
Now you can
#import "SwiftBridge.h"
instead of ProductModuleName-Swift.h
This's a workaround solution, for the next version of Xcode I think this problem will be solved.
Good luck
If you were able to build a project before, with no issues related to “ProductModuleName-Swift.h” not found error, and now you are getting that nasty errors again, the reason might sit in your recent changes.
For me this was by (accidental) incorrect .swift file encoding. Reverting changes and bringing the back manually, does the job.
I was having a hard time determining my module name/objective-c's import of swift's headers. I did read a lot of articles here too.
But the definitive answer for your project name with all its included special characters (be it '.' or a numeric or a space) - you can find the text that will work for you in the "Product Module Name" under the target's Build Settings.
For example my target name started with a numeric - "1mg" and the field mentioned above showed "_mg" as my module name.
so I used #import "_mg-Swift.h" and it worked.
This may be an obvious point (maybe too obvious), but you must have at least one swift file in the project for the header to generate. If you are writing boilerplate or config code with the intention of writing swift later the import won't work.
In my case I had to set the deployment target to at least “OS X 10.9” and the -Swift.h header was automatically generated. Keep in mind that you can get a lot of deprecation warnings when you change the deployment target version, especially when you have an older and very large Objective C code base. In our case we also had a lot of work to do in XIB files & view classes.
I had to delete WatchOS2 swift code from my Objective C project. And only after that XCode offered to generate -Swift.h
I had similar problem but my project was compiling before and suddenly got error after few files code change. It took me while to figure out why I am getting 'File not found' error for myproject-swift.h file. The code changes I had done had some errors. Xcode did not point put those error instead all time showing the 'File not found error'. Then got copy of previous version code and I compared with new code and merged file one by one. After each file merge complied the project to find the error. So bottom line is if you have error in your code Xcode may just display 'file not found error' for myproject-swift.h file. Most likely you have compilation error in your project. Clean those error and it will work.
If you're using something like Cocoapods (and working out of the workspace rather than the project) try opening the project and building it before opening the workspace and building. YMMV.
Sometimes you just need to unset and then set again the target membership on the obj-c .m file.

Should there be a link between the class name and the file name in which it resides?

OK, so I have 2 files (header and implementation) named MyLib.h and MyLib.m, inside those 2 files I have multiple classes, protocols and interfaces but none called 'MyLib'. Now, everything works just fine, I have only one problem, xCode doesn't show me any class hint except for MyLib (which btw is only the name of the file, there is no MyLib class).
Now, this small problem made me think about it, is this a bad practice? Is is better to have a file for each class and if yes, why?
I just created a .h file with a different name from the class inside it, and Xcode gives me the completion for the class name, not the file name. Have you #imported the header wherever you're trying to use it?