7.1 KiB
Getting Started
Add your Apple Platform
To initialize your SDK and start interacting with Appwrite services, you need to add a new Apple platform to your project. To add a new platform, go to your Appwrite console, select your project (create one if you haven't already), and click the 'Add Platform' button on the project Dashboard.
From the options, choose to add a new iOS, macOS, watchOS or tvOS platform and add your app credentials.
Add your app name and bundle identifier. Your bundle identifier can be found in your Xcode project file or your Info.plist file. By registering a new platform, you are allowing your app to communicate with the Appwrite API.
Registering URL schemes
In order to capture the Appwrite OAuth callback url, the following URL scheme needs to be added to project. You can add this from Xcode by selecting your project file, then the target you wish to use OAuth with. From the Info tab, expand the URL types section and add your Appwrite instance domain for the Identifier, and appwrite-callback-[PROJECT-ID] for the URL scheme. Be sure to replace the [PROJECT_ID] string with your actual Appwrite project ID. You can find your Appwrite project ID in your project settings screen in the console. Alternatively, you can add the following block directly to your targets Info.plist file:
<key>CFBundleURLTypes</key>
<array>
<dict>
<key>CFBundleTypeRole</key>
<string>Editor</string>
<key>CFBundleURLName</key>
<string>io.appwrite</string>
<key>CFBundleURLSchemes</key>
<array>
<string>appwrite-callback-[PROJECT-ID]</string>
</array>
</dict>
</array>
Next we need to add a hook to save cookies when our app is opened by its callback URL.
Registering an OAuth handler view
If you're using UIKit, you can skip this section.
In SwiftUI this is as simple as ensuring .registerOAuthHandler() is called on the View you want to invoke an OAuth request from.
Updating the SceneDelegate for UIKit
If you're using SwiftUI, you can skip this section.
For UIKit, you need to add the following function to your SceneDelegate.swift. If you have already defined this function, you can just add the contents from below.
func scene(_ scene: UIScene, openURLContexts URLContexts: Set<UIOpenURLContext>) {
guard let url = URLContexts.first?.url,
url.absoluteString.contains("appwrite-callback") else {
return
}
WebAuthComponent.handleIncomingCookie(from: url)
}
Init your SDK
Initialize your SDK with your Appwrite server API endpoint and project ID which can be found in your project settings page.
import Appwrite
func main() {
let client = Client()
.setEndpoint("http://[HOSTNAME_OR_IP]/v1") // Your API Endpoint
.setProject("5df5acd0d48c2") // Your project ID
.setSelfSigned() // Use only on dev mode with a self-signed SSL cert
}
Make Your First Request
Once your SDK object is initialized, create any of the Appwrite service objects and choose any request to send. Full documentation for any service method you would like to use can be found in your SDK documentation or in the API References section.
let account = Account(client)
do {
let user = try await account.create(
userId: ID.unique(),
email: "email@example.com",
password: "password",
name: "Walter O'Brien"
)
print(String(describing: user.toMap()))
} catch {
print(error.localizedDescription)
}
Full Example
import Appwrite
func main() {
let client = Client()
.setEndpoint("https://[HOSTNAME_OR_IP]/v1") // Your API Endpoint
.setProject("5df5acd0d48c2") // Your project ID
.setSelfSigned() // Use only on dev mode with a self-signed SSL cert
let account = Account(client)
do {
let user = try await account.create(
userId: ID.unique(),
email: "email@example.com",
password: "password",
name: "Walter O'Brien"
)
print(String(describing: account.toMap()))
} catch {
print(error.localizedDescription)
}
}
Type Safety with Models
The Appwrite Apple SDK provides type safety when working with database documents through generic methods. Methods like listDocuments, getDocument, and others accept a nestedType parameter that allows you to specify your custom model type for full type safety.
struct Book: Codable {
let name: String
let author: String
let releaseYear: String?
let category: String?
let genre: [String]?
let isCheckedOut: Bool
}
let databases = Databases(client)
do {
let documents = try await databases.listDocuments(
databaseId: "your-database-id",
collectionId: "your-collection-id",
nestedType: Book.self // Pass in your custom model type
)
for book in documents.documents {
print("Book: \(book.name) by \(book.author)") // Now you have full type safety
}
} catch {
print(error.localizedDescription)
}
Tip: You can use the appwrite types command to automatically generate model definitions based on your Appwrite database schema. Learn more about type generation.
Working with Model Methods
All Appwrite models come with built-in methods for data conversion and manipulation:
toMap() - Converts a model instance to a dictionary format, useful for debugging or manual data manipulation:
let user = try await account.get()
let userMap = user.toMap()
print(userMap) // Prints all user properties as a dictionary
from(map:) - Creates a model instance from a dictionary, useful when working with raw data:
let userData: [String: Any] = ["$id": "123", "name": "John", "email": "john@example.com"]
let user = User.from(map: userData)
encode(to:) - Encodes the model to JSON format (part of Swift's Codable protocol), useful for serialization:
let user = try await account.get()
let jsonData = try JSONEncoder().encode(user)
let jsonString = String(data: jsonData, encoding: .utf8)
Error Handling
When an error occurs, the Appwrite Apple SDK throws an AppwriteError object with message and code properties. You can handle any errors in a catch block and present the message or localizedDescription to the user or handle it yourself based on the provided error information. Below is an example.
import Appwrite
func main() {
let account = Account(client)
do {
let user = try await account.get()
print(String(describing: user.toMap()))
} catch {
print(error.localizedDescription)
}
}
Learn more
You can use the following resources to learn more and get help