Swifty MVVM Part 1

What is MVVM?

MVVM (Model-View-ViewModel) is a software design pattern that recently has risen in popularity with iOS developers. At a high level, MVVM separates the data from the view, with a view model formatting or converting the data to a format the view understands. This removes the logic from the view, creating very flexible code. MVVM works extremely well when handling data from an API.

MVVM can be broken down into three pieces:

Model - Data for view

- Data for view View Model - Formats the data

- Formats the data View - Presents the data

In part one of this blog post, we will cover a few key MVVM concepts and show you what they look like in Swift. In part two, we will show you how and why we used MVVM in the creation of our first iPhone app, Viable.af.

How we did it

The full project written in Swift 3.0 can be found here.

In the main ViewController.swift file a lot of the magic happens in viewDidLoad() . When the view loads, the app first checks for a valid API key, makes a call to the Dark Sky API, and finally returns the data to our delegate method dataReceived() . If the data is valid, it gets converted to JSON and then into our model.

guard let data = data else {

print ( "Error: No data" )

return

}

let json = JSON (data)

weatherDataArray = Utilities .loadWeatherDataFromJSON(json: json)



Below is a snippet from our model. Take note that none of the data is modified here, simply stored and ready for the view model.

class WeatherData : NSObject {

var rawUnixTime: Double

var minTemp: Double

var maxTemp: Double

var summary: String



init (rawUnixTime: Double , minTemp: Double , maxTemp: Double , summary: String ) {

self .rawUnixTime = rawUnixTime

self .minTemp = minTemp

self .maxTemp = maxTemp

self .summary = summary

}

}



Now that we have an array of our models, it’s time to process them in our view model so the view can properly display the content. In the ViewController.swift file, the index of the table view is used to create the view model.

let weatherData = weatherDataArray[indexPath.row]

let weatherViewModel = WeatherViewModel (weatherData)



The snippet above grabs one WeatherData object based on its index and then instantiates the view model based on this value. Below is the init() code for the view model. The date is not in a format that is friendly to users so the view model does some processing to make it more readable.

init ( _ weatherData: WeatherData ) {

self .weatherData = weatherData



rawUnixTime = weatherData.rawUnixTime

minTemp = Int (weatherData.minTemp.rounded())

maxTemp = Int (weatherData.maxTemp.rounded())

summary = weatherData.summary



guard let unixTime = rawUnixTime else {

print ( "Invalid unix time" )

return

}



let date = Date (timeIntervalSince1970: unixTime)

let dateFormatter = DateFormatter ()

dateFormatter.dateStyle = .medium

dateString = dateFormatter.string(from: date)

}



After the view model is created, the cellInstance method is called and returned.

return weatherViewModel.cellInstance(tableView, indexPath: indexPath)



This method creates the table view cell from the index, which in this scenario is our view. This is achieved by casting the cell to a WeatherTableViewCell . After getting the cell instance, the cell’s setup() method is called to populate the cell with data from the view model.

func cellInstance ( _ tableView: UITableView, indexPath: IndexPath) -> UITableViewCell {

let cell = tableView.dequeueReusableCell(withIdentifier: reuseIdentifier, for : indexPath) as ! WeatherTableViewCell

cell.setup( self )



return cell

}



A peek at the setup() method can be seen below.

func setup ( _ viewModel: WeatherViewModel) {

self .selectionStyle = . none



guard let minTemp = viewModel.minTemp,

let maxTemp = viewModel.maxTemp,

let summary = viewModel.summary else {

print ( "ViewModel is invalid" )

return

}



dateLabel.text = viewModel.dateString

minTempLabel.text = String (minTemp)

maxTempLabel.text = String (maxTemp)

summaryLabel.text = summary

}



Once the setup() function has ran, all of the data has been loaded into the table view and it will be displaying the week’s weather ahead.

Github Repo

Why MVVM?

Check that out in Part 2 here!