Navigate between view controllers with ease. π«
π More stable version (written in Swift 5) coming soon.
These instructions will help you integrate CoreNavigation into your project.
- Xcode 9 or higher
- iOS 8 or higher
- Cocoapods
CocoaPods is a dependency manager for Cocoa projects. You can install it with the following command:
$ gem install cocoapodsCocoaPods 1.1+ is required to build CoreNavigation 1.0+.
To integrate CoreNavigation into your Xcode project using CocoaPods, specify it in your Podfile:
target '<Your Target Name>' do
    use_frameworks!
    
    pod 'CoreNavigation', '1.0.0-beta-4'
endThen, run the following command:
$ pod installCarthage is a decentralized dependency manager that builds your dependencies and provides you with binary frameworks.
You can install Carthage with Homebrew using the following command:
$ brew update
$ brew install carthageTo integrate CoreNavigation into your Xcode project using Carthage, specify it in your Cartfile:
github "aronbalog/CoreNavigation" == "1.0.0-beta-4"
class PersonProfileViewController: UIViewController, DataReceivable {
    // DataReceivable associatedtype
    typealias DataType = Person
    func didReceiveData(_ data: Person) {
        // configure UI with data
    }
}Navigate.present { $0
    .to(PersonProfileViewController())
    .withData(person)
}Navigate.push { $0
    .to(PersonProfileViewController())
    .withData(person)
}Why use the Destination instead navigating directly to view controller?
Read about it on Medium:
- #0 present & push⦠For how long?
- #1 Forget about segues.
- #2 Passing data between view controllers.
- #3 Handle Universal Links Like a Boss.
struct PersonProfile: Destination, Routable {
    // Destination associatedtype
    typealias ViewControllerType = PersonProfileViewController
    // Routable patterns
    static var patterns: [String] = [
        "https://myapp.com/person/:personId(.*)",
        "https://myapp.com/user/:personId(.*)"
    ]
    
    let personId: String
    
    init(_ personId: String) {
        self.personId = personId
    }
    
    var parameters: [String : Any]? {
        return [
            "personId": personId
        ]
    }
    static func resolve(context: Context<PersonProfile>) {
        guard let personId = context.parameters?["personId"] as? String else {
            // cancel navigation with some error
            context.cancel(error: NavigationError.Destination.notFound)
            return
        }
        
        // fetch person
        fetchPerson(id: personId, completion: { (person: Person) in
            // continue to navigation
            context.complete(data: person)
        }, failure: { (error: Error) in
            // cancel navigation with some error
            context.cancel(error: error)
        })
    }
}In order to use Matchable types (String, URL, etc.) to navigate, every Destination type must be registered. Think about it as internal DNS.
PersonProfile.register()Additional syntax
Navigate.router.register(routableType: PersonProfile.self)Destination type can be routable without conforming to Routable protocol. Use this if you intend to create some kind of destination manifest and/or if route patterns are fetched from an external source:
Navigate.router.register(destinationType: PersonProfile.self, patterns: [
    "https://myapp.com/person/:personId(.*)",
    "https://myapp.com/user/:personId(.*)"
])Additional syntax
PersonProfile.self <- [
    "https://myapp.com/person/:personId(.*)",
    "https://myapp.com/user/:personId(.*)"
]
Settings.self <- [
    "https://myapp.com/settings"
]// present
Navigate.present { $0
    .to(PersonProfile("sherlock_holmes"))
    ...
}
// or push
Navigate.push { $0
    .to(PersonProfile("sherlock_holmes"))
    ...
}Additional syntax
// present
PersonProfile("sherlock_holmes").present { $0
    ...
}
// or push
PersonProfile("sherlock_holmes").push { $0
    ...
}Additional syntax
// present
PersonProfile("sherlock_holmes").present()
// or push
PersonProfile("sherlock_holmes").push()// present
Navigate.present { $0
    .to("https://myapp.com/person/sherlock_holmes")
    ...
}
// or push
Navigate.push { $0
    .to("https://myapp.com/person/sherlock_holmes")
    ...
}Additional syntax
// present
"https://myapp.com/person/sherlock_holmes".present { $0
    ...
}
// or push
"https://myapp.com/person/sherlock_holmes".push { $0
    ...
}Additional syntax
// present
"https://myapp.com/person/sherlock_holmes".present()
// or push
"https://myapp.com/person/sherlock_holmes".push()PersonProfile("sherlock_holmes").viewController { (viewController) in
    // vc is `PersonProfileViewController`
}"https://myapp.com/person/sherlock_holmes".viewController { (viewController) in
    ...
}do {
    let viewController = try PersonProfile("sherlock_holmes").viewController()
} catch let error {
    // handle error
}do {
    let viewController = try "https://myapp.com/person/sherlock_holmes".viewController()
} catch let error {
    // handle error
}Note:
If you implement custom destination resolving, it must happen on the main thread; otherwise, an error is thrown.
URL types can also be used to navigate or resolve view controller. Actually, any type conforming Matchable protocol can be used.
struct Person {
    let id: String
    ...
}
extension Person: Matchable {
    var uri: String {
        return "https://myapp.com/person/" + id
    }
}let person: Person = Person(id: "sherlock_holmes", ...)
// getting view controller
let personProfileViewController = try! person.viewController
// or navigating
person.present()
person.push()
// or more configurable syntax
Navigate.present { $0
    .to(person)
    ...
}- Animating
- Observing completion
- Observing success
- Observing failure
- Embedding
- Passing data
- Caching
- Protection
- State restoration
- Specifying origin view controller
Available in CoreNavigationTests target.
Current release:
- 1.0.0-beta-4
Please read Contributing for details on code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.