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How do I use custom keys with Swift 4's Decodable protocol?

Swift 4 introduced support for native JSON encoding and decoding via the Decodable protocol. How do I use custom keys for this?

E.g., say I have a struct

struct Address:Codable {
    var street:String
    var zip:String
    var city:String
    var state:String
}

I can encode this to JSON.

let address = Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zip: "94608", city: "Emeryville", state: "California")

if let encoded = try? encoder.encode(address) {
    if let json = String(data: encoded, encoding: .utf8) {
        // Print JSON String
        print(json)

        // JSON string is 
           { "state":"California", 
             "street":"Apple Bay Street", 
             "zip":"94608", 
             "city":"Emeryville" 
           }
    }
}

I can encode this back to an object.

    let newAddress: Address = try decoder.decode(Address.self, from: encoded)

But If I had a json object that was

{ 
   "state":"California", 
   "street":"Apple Bay Street", 
   "zip_code":"94608", 
   "city":"Emeryville" 
}

How would I tell the decoder on Address that zip_code maps to zip? I believe you use the new CodingKey protocol, but I can't figure out how to use this.


H
Hamish

Manually customising coding keys

In your example, you're getting an auto-generated conformance to Codable as all your properties also conform to Codable. This conformance automatically creates a key type that simply corresponds to the property names – which is then used in order to encode to/decode from a single keyed container.

However one really neat feature of this auto-generated conformance is that if you define a nested enum in your type called "CodingKeys" (or use a typealias with this name) that conforms to the CodingKey protocol – Swift will automatically use this as the key type. This therefore allows you to easily customise the keys that your properties are encoded/decoded with.

So what this means is you can just say:

struct Address : Codable {

    var street: String
    var zip: String
    var city: String
    var state: String

    private enum CodingKeys : String, CodingKey {
        case street, zip = "zip_code", city, state
    }
}

The enum case names need to match the property names, and the raw values of these cases need to match the keys that you're encoding to/decoding from (unless specified otherwise, the raw values of a String enumeration will the same as the case names). Therefore, the zip property will now be encoded/decoded using the key "zip_code".

The exact rules for the auto-generated Encodable/Decodable conformance are detailed by the evolution proposal (emphasis mine):

In addition to automatic CodingKey requirement synthesis for enums, Encodable & Decodable requirements can be automatically synthesized for certain types as well: Types conforming to Encodable whose properties are all Encodable get an automatically generated String-backed CodingKey enum mapping properties to case names. Similarly for Decodable types whose properties are all Decodable Types falling into (1) — and types which manually provide a CodingKey enum (named CodingKeys, directly, or via a typealias) whose cases map 1-to-1 to Encodable/Decodable properties by name — get automatic synthesis of init(from:) and encode(to:) as appropriate, using those properties and keys Types which fall into neither (1) nor (2) will have to provide a custom key type if needed and provide their own init(from:) and encode(to:), as appropriate

Example encoding:

import Foundation

let address = Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zip: "94608",
                      city: "Emeryville", state: "California")

do {
    let encoded = try JSONEncoder().encode(address)
    print(String(decoding: encoded, as: UTF8.self))
} catch {
    print(error)
}
//{"state":"California","street":"Apple Bay Street","zip_code":"94608","city":"Emeryville"}

Example decoding:

// using the """ multi-line string literal here, as introduced in SE-0168,
// to avoid escaping the quotation marks
let jsonString = """
{"state":"California","street":"Apple Bay Street","zip_code":"94608","city":"Emeryville"}
"""

do {
    let decoded = try JSONDecoder().decode(Address.self, from: Data(jsonString.utf8))
    print(decoded)
} catch {
    print(error)
}

// Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zip: "94608",
// city: "Emeryville", state: "California")

Automatic snake_case JSON keys for camelCase property names

In Swift 4.1, if you rename your zip property to zipCode, you can take advantage of the key encoding/decoding strategies on JSONEncoder and JSONDecoder in order to automatically convert coding keys between camelCase and snake_case.

Example encoding:

import Foundation

struct Address : Codable {
  var street: String
  var zipCode: String
  var city: String
  var state: String
}

let address = Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zipCode: "94608",
                      city: "Emeryville", state: "California")

do {
  let encoder = JSONEncoder()
  encoder.keyEncodingStrategy = .convertToSnakeCase
  let encoded = try encoder.encode(address)
  print(String(decoding: encoded, as: UTF8.self))
} catch {
  print(error)
}
//{"state":"California","street":"Apple Bay Street","zip_code":"94608","city":"Emeryville"}

Example decoding:

let jsonString = """
{"state":"California","street":"Apple Bay Street","zip_code":"94608","city":"Emeryville"}
"""

do {
  let decoder = JSONDecoder()
  decoder.keyDecodingStrategy = .convertFromSnakeCase
  let decoded = try decoder.decode(Address.self, from: Data(jsonString.utf8))
  print(decoded)
} catch {
  print(error)
}

// Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zipCode: "94608",
// city: "Emeryville", state: "California")

One important thing to note about this strategy however is that it won't be able to round-trip some property names with acronyms or initialisms which, according to the Swift API design guidelines, should be uniformly upper or lower case (depending on the position).

For example, a property named someURL will be encoded with the key some_url, but on decoding, this will be transformed to someUrl.

To fix this, you'll have to manually specify the coding key for that property to be string that the decoder expects, e.g someUrl in this case (which will still be transformed to some_url by the encoder):

struct S : Codable {

  private enum CodingKeys : String, CodingKey {
    case someURL = "someUrl", someOtherProperty
  }

  var someURL: String
  var someOtherProperty: String
}

(This doesn't strictly answer your specific question, but given the canonical nature of this Q&A, I feel it's worth including)

Custom automatic JSON key mapping

In Swift 4.1, you can take advantage of the custom key encoding/decoding strategies on JSONEncoder and JSONDecoder, allowing you to provide a custom function to map coding keys.

The function you provide takes a [CodingKey], which represents the coding path for the current point in encoding/decoding (in most cases, you'll only need to consider the last element; that is, the current key). The function returns a CodingKey that will replace the last key in this array.

For example, UpperCamelCase JSON keys for lowerCamelCase property names:

import Foundation

// wrapper to allow us to substitute our mapped string keys.
struct AnyCodingKey : CodingKey {

  var stringValue: String
  var intValue: Int?

  init(_ base: CodingKey) {
    self.init(stringValue: base.stringValue, intValue: base.intValue)
  }

  init(stringValue: String) {
    self.stringValue = stringValue
  }

  init(intValue: Int) {
    self.stringValue = "\(intValue)"
    self.intValue = intValue
  }

  init(stringValue: String, intValue: Int?) {
    self.stringValue = stringValue
    self.intValue = intValue
  }
}

extension JSONEncoder.KeyEncodingStrategy {

  static var convertToUpperCamelCase: JSONEncoder.KeyEncodingStrategy {
    return .custom { codingKeys in

      var key = AnyCodingKey(codingKeys.last!)

      // uppercase first letter
      if let firstChar = key.stringValue.first {
        let i = key.stringValue.startIndex
        key.stringValue.replaceSubrange(
          i ... i, with: String(firstChar).uppercased()
        )
      }
      return key
    }
  }
}

extension JSONDecoder.KeyDecodingStrategy {

  static var convertFromUpperCamelCase: JSONDecoder.KeyDecodingStrategy {
    return .custom { codingKeys in

      var key = AnyCodingKey(codingKeys.last!)

      // lowercase first letter
      if let firstChar = key.stringValue.first {
        let i = key.stringValue.startIndex
        key.stringValue.replaceSubrange(
          i ... i, with: String(firstChar).lowercased()
        )
      }
      return key
    }
  }
}

You can now encode with the .convertToUpperCamelCase key strategy:

let address = Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zipCode: "94608",
                      city: "Emeryville", state: "California")

do {
  let encoder = JSONEncoder()
  encoder.keyEncodingStrategy = .convertToUpperCamelCase
  let encoded = try encoder.encode(address)
  print(String(decoding: encoded, as: UTF8.self))
} catch {
  print(error)
}
//{"Street":"Apple Bay Street","City":"Emeryville","State":"California","ZipCode":"94608"}

and decode with the .convertFromUpperCamelCase key strategy:

let jsonString = """
{"Street":"Apple Bay Street","City":"Emeryville","State":"California","ZipCode":"94608"}
"""

do {
  let decoder = JSONDecoder()
  decoder.keyDecodingStrategy = .convertFromUpperCamelCase
  let decoded = try decoder.decode(Address.self, from: Data(jsonString.utf8))
  print(decoded)
} catch {
  print(error)
}

// Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zipCode: "94608",
// city: "Emeryville", state: "California")

""" is for a multi-line literal :)
@MartinR Or even just a single line literal without having to escape "s :D
@chrismanderson Exactly – especially given that the compiler enforces that the case names are kept in sync with the property names (it will give you an error saying you're not conforming to Codable otherwise)
@ClayEllis Ah yes, although of course using the nested containers for example directly in the initialiser of Address unnecessarily ties yourself to decoding a JSON object that starts at a specific place in the parent object graph. It would be much nicer to abstract the starting key path up to the decoder itself – here's a rough hackey-ish implementation.
@c1pherB1t No worries! codingKeys.last gives you current coding key, all the previous elements in the array are parent coding keys for the given coding path. For example when decoding {"foo": {"bar": "baz"}}, when the key decoding strategy is applied to "bar", codingKeys will be ["foo", "bar"].
I
Imanou Petit

With Swift 4.2, according to your needs, you may use one of the 3 following strategies in order to make your model objects custom property names match your JSON keys.

#1. Using custom coding keys

When you declare a struct that conforms to Codable (Decodable and Encodable protocols) with the following implementation...

struct Address: Codable {
    var street: String
    var zip: String
    var city: String
    var state: String        
}

... the compiler automatically generates a nested enum that conforms to CodingKey protocol for you.

struct Address: Codable {
    var street: String
    var zip: String
    var city: String
    var state: String

    // compiler generated
    private enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey {
        case street
        case zip
        case city
        case state
    }
}

Therefore, if the keys used in your serialized data format don't match the property names from your data type, you can manually implement this enum and set the appropriate rawValue for the required cases.

The following example shows how to do:

import Foundation

struct Address: Codable {
    var street: String
    var zip: String
    var city: String
    var state: String

    private enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey {
        case street
        case zip = "zip_code"
        case city
        case state
    }
}

Encode (replacing zip property with "zip_code" JSON key):

let address = Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zip: "94608", city: "Emeryville", state: "California")

let encoder = JSONEncoder()
if let jsonData = try? encoder.encode(address), let jsonString = String(data: jsonData, encoding: .utf8) {
    print(jsonString)
}

/*
 prints:
 {"state":"California","street":"Apple Bay Street","zip_code":"94608","city":"Emeryville"}
 */

Decode (replacing "zip_code" JSON key with zip property):

let jsonString = """
{"state":"California","street":"Apple Bay Street","zip_code":"94608","city":"Emeryville"}
"""

let decoder = JSONDecoder()
if let jsonData = jsonString.data(using: .utf8), let address = try? decoder.decode(Address.self, from: jsonData) {
    print(address)
}

/*
 prints:
 Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zip: "94608", city: "Emeryville", state: "California")
 */

#2. Using snake case to camel case key coding strategies

If your JSON has snake-cased keys and you want to convert them to camel-cased properties for your model object, you can set your JSONEncoder's keyEncodingStrategy and JSONDecoder's keyDecodingStrategy properties to .convertToSnakeCase.

The following example shows how to do:

import Foundation

struct Address: Codable {
    var street: String
    var zipCode: String
    var cityName: String
    var state: String
}

Encode (converting camel cased properties into snake cased JSON keys):

let address = Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zipCode: "94608", cityName: "Emeryville", state: "California")

let encoder = JSONEncoder()
encoder.keyEncodingStrategy = .convertToSnakeCase
if let jsonData = try? encoder.encode(address), let jsonString = String(data: jsonData, encoding: .utf8) {
    print(jsonString)
}

/*
 prints:
 {"state":"California","street":"Apple Bay Street","zip_code":"94608","city_name":"Emeryville"}
 */

Decode (converting snake cased JSON keys into camel cased properties):

let jsonString = """
{"state":"California","street":"Apple Bay Street","zip_code":"94608","city_name":"Emeryville"}
"""

let decoder = JSONDecoder()
decoder.keyDecodingStrategy = .convertFromSnakeCase
if let jsonData = jsonString.data(using: .utf8), let address = try? decoder.decode(Address.self, from: jsonData) {
    print(address)
}

/*
 prints:
 Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zipCode: "94608", cityName: "Emeryville", state: "California")
 */

#3. Using custom key coding strategies

If necessary, JSONEncoder and JSONDecoder allow you to set a custom strategy to map coding keys using JSONEncoder.KeyEncodingStrategy.custom(_:) and JSONDecoder.KeyDecodingStrategy.custom(_:).

The following example shows how to implement them:

import Foundation

struct Address: Codable {
    var street: String
    var zip: String
    var city: String
    var state: String
}

struct AnyKey: CodingKey {
    var stringValue: String
    var intValue: Int?

    init?(stringValue: String) {
        self.stringValue = stringValue
    }

    init?(intValue: Int) {
        self.stringValue = String(intValue)
        self.intValue = intValue
    }
}

Encode (converting lowercased first letter properties into uppercased first letter JSON keys):

let address = Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zip: "94608", city: "Emeryville", state: "California")

let encoder = JSONEncoder()
encoder.keyEncodingStrategy = .custom({ (keys) -> CodingKey in
    let lastKey = keys.last!
    guard lastKey.intValue == nil else { return lastKey }
    let stringValue = lastKey.stringValue.prefix(1).uppercased() + lastKey.stringValue.dropFirst()
    return AnyKey(stringValue: stringValue)!
})

if let jsonData = try? encoder.encode(address), let jsonString = String(data: jsonData, encoding: .utf8) {
    print(jsonString)
}

/*
 prints:
 {"Zip":"94608","Street":"Apple Bay Street","City":"Emeryville","State":"California"}
 */

Decode (converting uppercased first letter JSON keys into lowercased first letter properties):

let jsonString = """
{"State":"California","Street":"Apple Bay Street","Zip":"94608","City":"Emeryville"}
"""

let decoder = JSONDecoder()
decoder.keyDecodingStrategy = .custom({ (keys) -> CodingKey in
    let lastKey = keys.last!
    guard lastKey.intValue == nil else { return lastKey }
    let stringValue = lastKey.stringValue.prefix(1).lowercased() + lastKey.stringValue.dropFirst()
    return AnyKey(stringValue: stringValue)!
})

if let jsonData = jsonString.data(using: .utf8), let address = try? decoder.decode(Address.self, from: jsonData) {
    print(address)
}

/*
 prints:
 Address(street: "Apple Bay Street", zip: "94608", city: "Emeryville", state: "California")
 */

Sources:

Apple developer documentation: "Encoding and Decoding Custom Types"

WWDC 2017 session 212: "What's new in Foundation"

MartianCraft: "Implementing a custom key strategy for coding types"


U
Unheilig

What I have done is create own structure just like what you are getting from the JSON with respect to its data types.

Just like this:

struct Track {
let id : Int
let contributingArtistNames:String
let name : String
let albumName :String
let copyrightP:String
let copyrightC:String
let playlistCount:Int
let trackPopularity:Int
let playlistFollowerCount:Int
let artistFollowerCount : Int
let label : String
}

After this you need to create an extension of the same struct extending decodable and the enum of the same structure with CodingKey and then you need to initialize the decoder using this enum with its keys and datatypes (Keys will come from the enum and the datatypes will be coming or say referenced from the structure itself)

extension Track: Decodable {

    enum TrackCodingKeys: String, CodingKey {
        case id = "id"
        case contributingArtistNames = "primaryArtistsNames"
        case spotifyId = "spotifyId"
        case name = "name"
        case albumName = "albumName"
        case albumImageUrl = "albumImageUrl"
        case copyrightP = "copyrightP"
        case copyrightC = "copyrightC"
        case playlistCount = "playlistCount"
        case trackPopularity = "trackPopularity"
        case playlistFollowerCount = "playlistFollowerCount"
        case artistFollowerCount = "artistFollowers"
        case label = "label"
    }
    init(from decoder: Decoder) throws {
        let trackContainer = try decoder.container(keyedBy: TrackCodingKeys.self)
        if trackContainer.contains(.id){
            id = try trackContainer.decode(Int.self, forKey: .id)
        }else{
            id = 0
        }
        if trackContainer.contains(.contributingArtistNames){
            contributingArtistNames = try trackContainer.decode(String.self, forKey: .contributingArtistNames)
        }else{
            contributingArtistNames = ""
        }
        if trackContainer.contains(.spotifyId){
            spotifyId = try trackContainer.decode(String.self, forKey: .spotifyId)
        }else{
            spotifyId = ""
        }
        if trackContainer.contains(.name){
            name = try trackContainer.decode(String.self, forKey: .name)
        }else{
            name = ""
        }
        if trackContainer.contains(.albumName){
            albumName = try trackContainer.decode(String.self, forKey: .albumName)
        }else{
            albumName = ""
        }
        if trackContainer.contains(.albumImageUrl){
            albumImageUrl = try trackContainer.decode(String.self, forKey: .albumImageUrl)
        }else{
            albumImageUrl = ""
        }
        if trackContainer.contains(.copyrightP){
            copyrightP = try trackContainer.decode(String.self, forKey: .copyrightP)
        }else{
            copyrightP = ""
        }
        if trackContainer.contains(.copyrightC){
                copyrightC = try trackContainer.decode(String.self, forKey: .copyrightC)
        }else{
            copyrightC = ""
        }
        if trackContainer.contains(.playlistCount){
            playlistCount = try trackContainer.decode(Int.self, forKey: .playlistCount)
        }else{
            playlistCount = 0
        }

        if trackContainer.contains(.trackPopularity){
            trackPopularity = try trackContainer.decode(Int.self, forKey: .trackPopularity)
        }else{
            trackPopularity = 0
        }
        if trackContainer.contains(.playlistFollowerCount){
            playlistFollowerCount = try trackContainer.decode(Int.self, forKey: .playlistFollowerCount)
        }else{
            playlistFollowerCount = 0
        }

        if trackContainer.contains(.artistFollowerCount){
            artistFollowerCount = try trackContainer.decode(Int.self, forKey: .artistFollowerCount)
        }else{
            artistFollowerCount = 0
        }
        if trackContainer.contains(.label){
            label = try trackContainer.decode(String.self, forKey: .label)
        }else{
            label = ""
        }
    }
}

You need to change here each and every key and datatypes according to your needs and use it with the decoder.


Or you could use decodeIfPresent : label = trackContainer.decodeIfPresent(String.self, forKey: .label) ?? ""
R
Renjish C

By using CodingKey you can use custom keys in codable or decodable protocol.

struct person: Codable {
    var name: String
    var age: Int
    var street: String
    var state: String

    private enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey {
        case name
        case age
        case street = "Street_name"
        case state
    } }