Optimizing views in SwiftUI using EquatableView

SwiftUI provides us a very fast and easy to use diffing algorithm, but as you might know, diffing is a linear operation. It means that diffing will be very fast for simple layouts and can take some time for a complicated layout.

I have good news for you. SwiftUI allows us to replace the standalone diffing algorithm with our custom logic. This week we will talk about optimizing our SwiftUI layouts using the equatable modifier.

Diffing in SwiftUI

As you remember, we already talked about diffing in SwiftUI, but let me remind how it works. Whenever you change the source of truth for your views like @State or @ObservableObject, SwiftUI runs body property of your view to generate a new one. As the last step, SwiftUI renders a new view if something changed. The process of calculating a new body depends on how deep is your view hierarchy. Happily, we can replace SwiftUI diffing with our simplified version whenever we know the better way to determine changes.

To learn more about diffing, take a look at “You have to change mindset to use SwiftUI” post.

EquatableView

Sometimes we don’t need the true diffing of SwiftUI, or we want to ignore some changes in data, and this is the exact place where we can use the EquatableView struct. EquatableView struct is a wrapper for a View, and it also conforms to View protocol. All you need to do to use EquatableView is conforming your view to Equatable protocol. Let’s take a simple look at a good example.

struct CalendarView : View , Equatable { let sleeps : [ Date : [ Sleep ]] let dates : [ Date ] var body : some View { List { ForEach ( dates , id : \ . self ) { date in Section ( header : Text ( " \( date , formatter : DateFormatter . mediumDate ) " )) { ForEach ( self . sleeps [ date , default : []], id : \ . id ) { sleep in CalendarRow ( sleep : sleep ) } } } } . listStyle ( GroupedListStyle ()) } }

In the example above, you see the code from my NapBot app. It is a calendar view that represents your sleep per day. I decide to replace SwiftUI diffing with my own by adding Equatable conformance. As you can see, it is a straightforward process. You can go further by overriding == function and adding your custom logic there.

struct CalendarView : View , Equatable { let sleeps : [ Date : [ Sleep ]] let dates : [ Date ] var body : some View { List { ForEach ( dates , id : \ . self ) { date in Section ( header : Text ( " \( date , formatter : DateFormatter . mediumDate ) " )) { ForEach ( self . sleeps [ date , default : []], id : \ . id ) { sleep in CalendarRow ( sleep : sleep ) } } } } . listStyle ( GroupedListStyle ()) } static func == ( lhs : Self , rhs : Self ) -> Bool { lhs . sleeps . count == rhs . sleeps . count } }

Now we can wrap our CalendarView with EquatableView.

Remember, you have to wrap your view with EquatableView to replace standalone diffing with yours.

struct CalendarContainerView : View { @EnvironmentObject var store : CalendarStore var body : some View { EquatableView ( CalendarView ( sleeps : store . sleeps , dates : store . dates ) ) . onAppear ( perform : store . fetch ) } }

Equatable modifier

SwiftUI allows us to avoid wrapping with EquatableView by using an equatable modifier. Basically, it does the same thing but in a short way.

struct CalendarContainerView : View { @EnvironmentObject var store : CalendarStore var body : some View { CalendarView ( sleeps : store . sleeps , dates : store . dates ) . equatable () . onAppear ( perform : store . fetch ) } }

Container views and equatable rendering views

It is so easy to add Equatable conformance to your view when it only renders some data. You even don’t need to override == function. You can quickly achieve this behavior by extracting your views into Container and Rendering views. We already talked multiple times on my blog about Container and Rendering views. Rendering views simply take some data and render it. That’s it.

Rendering views should not contain any logic or state manipulations, and it should delegate them to Container views. This separation allows you to make your Rendering views conforming Equatable in an effortless way.

To learn more about Container and Rendering views, take a look at my “Introducing Container views in SwiftUI” post.

Conclusion

SwiftUI allows us to build our apps in a very new way, where the framework itself applies a lot of magic behind the scene. But I’m delighted that SwiftUI provides so many capabilities to customize default behavior. EquatableView can boost performance when body computation is longer than your equality check. I hope you enjoy the post. Feel free to follow me on Twitter and ask your questions related to this post. Thanks for reading, and see you next week!