I am reading the German e-Passport and it's reading the Datagroups 1,2,3 & 14 and SOD, COM also. Now, I want to read the Datagroup 11 which hold the additional details. But the German Passport doesn't read the optional data. So, how do I know Which passports read which Groups?
I have gone through the ICAO 9303 but didn't get any chance to get this information.
In my app I read DG32, DG33, DG34, but flow is the same, here is some example of how to implement DG11 file reading using NFCPassportReader
public class DataGroup {
public var elements: [String: String] = [:]
// I added this dictionary to get value by key from documentation
class DG11: DataGroup {
private let tags = [0x5F0E, 0x5F0F, 0x5F10, 0x5F11, 0x5F2B]
required init(_ data: [UInt8]) throws {
try super.init(data)
datagroupType = .DG11
}
override func parse(_ data: [UInt8]) throws {
var tag = try getNextTag()
if tag != 0x5C { throw TagError.InvalidResponse }
_ = try getNextValue()
try tags.forEach { _ in
tag = try getNextTag()
parseBody(try getNextValue(), key: String(tag, radix: 16, uppercase: true))
}
print(elements)
}
private func parseBody(_ data: [UInt8], key: String) {
elements[key] = String(bytes: data[0...], encoding: .utf8)
}
}
Hope it helps
I have a string "John+20", I would like to extract out "John", so, I tried following based on this answer:
// data contains value "John+20"
static func getName(fromString data: String?) {
guard let myData = data else {
return
}
let idx = myData.index(of: "+")
//Compiler ERROR: Generic parameter 'Self' could not be inferred
let name = String(myData[..<idx])
}
But I get the error I mentioned in code comment, why is that?
I am using Swift 4.1 in my iOS project.
I guess the index is an optional as well. Try :
// data contains value "John+20"
static func getName(fromString data: String?) {
guard let myData = data else, let idx = myData.index(of: "+") {
return
}
let name = String(myData[..<idx])
}
i have been looking at the following (I am pretty new to IOS so any help would be gratefully appreciated).
How to convert string to MD5 hash using ios swift
And with the explanation of code used for Swift 2.2 from Hugo Alonso i am having problems actually using the function and declaring a string that is then hashed.
Code is below
struct MD5Digester {
// return MD5 digest of string provided
static func digest(string: String) -> String? {
guard let data = string.dataUsingEncoding(NSUTF8StringEncoding) else { return nil }
var digest = [UInt8](count: Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH), repeatedValue: 0)
CC_MD5(data.bytes, CC_LONG(data.length), &digest)
return (0..<Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH)).reduce("") { $0 + String(format: "%02x", digest[$1]) }
}
}
Any help is appreciated.
Thanks
I need to send an URL in Arabic language, so I need to encode it before I put it in URL. I am using Swift code.
Below is an example what i really need
var s = "www.example.com/السلام عليكم"
let url = NSURL(string : s)
So the word (السلام عليكم) is in Arabic characters that what I want to send.
Swift 2.0
let urlwithPercentEscapes = myurlstring.stringByAddingPercentEncodingWithAllowedCharacters( NSCharacterSet.URLQueryAllowedCharacterSet())
Swift 3
let urlwithPercentEscapes = myurlstring.addingPercentEncoding( withAllowedCharacters: .urlQueryAllowed)
To improve #Druva's answer
create an extention somewhere in the project
Swift 2.0
extension String
{
func encodeUrl() -> String
{
return self.stringByAddingPercentEncodingWithAllowedCharacters( NSCharacterSet.URLQueryAllowedCharacterSet())
}
func decodeUrl() -> String
{
return self.stringByRemovingPercentEncoding
}
}
Swift 3.0
extension String
{
func encodeUrl() -> String
{
return self.addingPercentEncoding( withAllowedCharacters: .urlQueryAllowed)
}
func decodeUrl() -> String
{
return self.stringByRemovingPercentEncoding
}
}
You need to encode url as you have written. You can do so with that string method:
stringByAddingPercentEscapesUsingEncoding(NSStringEncoding)
So your code will be:
var s = "www.example.com/السلام عليكم"
// you may add check before force unwrapping
let url = NSURL(string : s.stringByAddingPercentEscapesUsingEncoding(NSUTF8StringEncoding)!)
You need to encode this string as it contains special characters.
var s = "www.example.com/السلام عليكم"
let encodedLink = s.addingPercentEncoding(withAllowedCharacters: .urlFragmentAllowed)
let encodedURL = NSURL(string: encodedLink!)! as URL
where encodedURL is your final URL
swift 4
we face the same problem it solved by this way
extension String {
var fixedArabicURL: String? {
return self.addingPercentEncoding(withAllowedCharacters: CharacterSet.alphanumerics
.union(CharacterSet.urlPathAllowed)
.union(CharacterSet.urlHostAllowed))
} }
you have to Encode this URL before sending this URL
Given the name of a file in the bundle, I want load the file into my Swift app. So I need to use this method:
let soundURL = NSBundle.mainBundle().URLForResource(fname, withExtension: ext)
For whatever reason, the method needs the filename separated from the file extension. Fine, it's easy enough to separate the two in most languages. But so far I'm not finding it to be so in Swift.
So here is what I have:
var rt: String.Index = fileName.rangeOfString(".", options:NSStringCompareOptions.BackwardsSearch)
var fname: String = fileName .substringToIndex(rt)
var ext = fileName.substringFromIndex(rt)
If I don't include the typing on the first line, I get errors on the two subsequent lines. With it, I'm getting an error on the first line:
Cannot convert the expression's type '(UnicodeScalarLiteralConvertible, options: NSStringCompareOptions)' to type 'UnicodeScalarLiteralConvertible'
How can I split the filename from the extension? Is there some elegant way to do this?
I was all excited about Swift because it seemed like a much more elegant language than Objective C. But now I'm finding that it has its own cumbersomeness.
Second attempt: I decided to make my own string-search method:
func rfind(haystack: String, needle: Character) -> Int {
var a = Array(haystack)
for var i = a.count - 1; i >= 0; i-- {
println(a[i])
if a[i] == needle {
println(i)
return i;
}
}
return -1
}
But now I get an error on the line var rt: String.Index = rfind(fileName, needle: "."):
'Int' is not convertible to 'String.Index'
Without the cast, I get an error on the two subsequent lines.
Can anyone help me to split this filename and extension?
Swift 5.0 update:
As pointed out in the comment, you can use this.
let filename: NSString = "bottom_bar.png"
let pathExtention = filename.pathExtension
let pathPrefix = filename.deletingPathExtension
This is with Swift 2, Xcode 7: If you have the filename with the extension already on it, then you can pass the full filename in as the first parameter and a blank string as the second parameter:
let soundURL = NSBundle.mainBundle()
.URLForResource("soundfile.ext", withExtension: "")
Alternatively nil as the extension parameter also works.
If you have a URL, and you want to get the name of the file itself for some reason, then you can do this:
soundURL.URLByDeletingPathExtension?.lastPathComponent
Swift 4
let soundURL = NSBundle.mainBundle().URLForResource("soundfile.ext", withExtension: "")
soundURL.deletingPathExtension().lastPathComponent
Works in Swift 5. Adding these behaviors to String class:
extension String {
func fileName() -> String {
return URL(fileURLWithPath: self).deletingPathExtension().lastPathComponent
}
func fileExtension() -> String {
return URL(fileURLWithPath: self).pathExtension
}
}
Example:
let file = "image.png"
let fileNameWithoutExtension = file.fileName()
let fileExtension = file.fileExtension()
Solution Swift 4
This solution will work for all instances and does not depend on manually parsing the string.
let path = "/Some/Random/Path/To/This.Strange.File.txt"
let fileName = URL(fileURLWithPath: path).deletingPathExtension().lastPathComponent
Swift.print(fileName)
The resulting output will be
This.Strange.File
In Swift 2.1 String.pathExtension is not available anymore. Instead you need to determine it through NSURL conversion:
NSURL(fileURLWithPath: filePath).pathExtension
In Swift you can change to NSString to get extension faster:
extension String {
func getPathExtension() -> String {
return (self as NSString).pathExtension
}
}
Latest Swift 4.2 works like this:
extension String {
func fileName() -> String {
return URL(fileURLWithPath: self).deletingPathExtension().lastPathComponent
}
func fileExtension() -> String {
return URL(fileURLWithPath: self).pathExtension
}
}
In Swift 2.1, it seems that the current way to do this is:
let filename = fileURL.URLByDeletingPathExtension?.lastPathComponent
let extension = fileURL.pathExtension
Swift 5 with code sugar
extension String {
var fileName: String {
URL(fileURLWithPath: self).deletingPathExtension().lastPathComponent
}
var fileExtension: String{
URL(fileURLWithPath: self).pathExtension
}
}
SWIFT 3.x Shortest Native Solution
let fileName:NSString = "the_file_name.mp3"
let onlyName = fileName.deletingPathExtension
let onlyExt = fileName.pathExtension
No extension or any extra stuff
(I've tested. based on #gabbler solution for Swift 2)
Swift 5
URL.deletingPathExtension().lastPathComponent
Strings in Swift can definitely by tricky. If you want a pure Swift method, here's how I would do it:
Use find to find the last occurrence of a "." in the reverse of the string
Use advance to get the correct index of the "." in the original string
Use String's subscript function that takes an IntervalType to get the strings
Package this all up in a function that returns an optional tuple of the name and extension
Something like this:
func splitFilename(str: String) -> (name: String, ext: String)? {
if let rDotIdx = find(reverse(str), ".") {
let dotIdx = advance(str.endIndex, -rDotIdx)
let fname = str[str.startIndex..<advance(dotIdx, -1)]
let ext = str[dotIdx..<str.endIndex]
return (fname, ext)
}
return nil
}
Which would be used like:
let str = "/Users/me/Documents/Something.something/text.txt"
if let split = splitFilename(str) {
println(split.name)
println(split.ext)
}
Which outputs:
/Users/me/Documents/Something.something/text
txt
Or, just use the already available NSString methods like pathExtension and stringByDeletingPathExtension.
Swift 5
URL(string: filePath)?.pathExtension
Try this for a simple Swift 4 solution
extension String {
func stripExtension(_ extensionSeperator: Character = ".") -> String {
let selfReversed = self.reversed()
guard let extensionPosition = selfReversed.index(of: extensionSeperator) else { return self }
return String(self[..<self.index(before: (extensionPosition.base.samePosition(in: self)!))])
}
}
print("hello.there.world".stripExtension())
// prints "hello.there"
Swift 3.0
let sourcePath = NSURL(string: fnName)?.pathExtension
let pathPrefix = fnName.replacingOccurrences(of: "." + sourcePath!, with: "")
Swift 3.x extended solution:
extension String {
func lastPathComponent(withExtension: Bool = true) -> String {
let lpc = self.nsString.lastPathComponent
return withExtension ? lpc : lpc.nsString.deletingPathExtension
}
var nsString: NSString {
return NSString(string: self)
}
}
let path = "/very/long/path/to/filename_v123.456.plist"
let filename = path.lastPathComponent(withExtension: false)
filename constant now contains "filename_v123.456"
A better way (or at least an alternative in Swift 2.0) is to use the String pathComponents property. This splits the pathname into an array of strings. e.g
if let pathComponents = filePath.pathComponents {
if let last = pathComponents.last {
print(" The last component is \(last)") // This would be the extension
// Getting the last but one component is a bit harder
// Note the edge case of a string with no delimiters!
}
}
// Otherwise you're out of luck, this wasn't a path name!
They got rid of pathExtension for whatever reason.
let str = "Hello/this/is/a/filepath/file.ext"
let l = str.componentsSeparatedByString("/")
let file = l.last?.componentsSeparatedByString(".")[0]
let ext = l.last?.componentsSeparatedByString(".")[1]
A cleaned up answer for Swift 4 with an extension off of PHAsset:
import Photos
extension PHAsset {
var originalFilename: String? {
if #available(iOS 9.0, *),
let resource = PHAssetResource.assetResources(for: self).first {
return resource.originalFilename
}
return value(forKey: "filename") as? String
}
}
As noted in XCode, the originalFilename is the name of the asset at the time it was created or imported.
Maybe I'm getting too late for this but a solution that worked for me and consider quite simple is using the #file compiler directive. Here is an example where I have a class FixtureManager, defined in FixtureManager.swift inside the /Tests/MyProjectTests/Fixturesdirectory. This works both in Xcode and withswift test`
import Foundation
final class FixtureManager {
static let fixturesDirectory = URL(fileURLWithPath: #file).deletingLastPathComponent()
func loadFixture(in fixturePath: String) throws -> Data {
return try Data(contentsOf: fixtureUrl(for: fixturePath))
}
func fixtureUrl(for fixturePath: String) -> URL {
return FixtureManager.fixturesDirectory.appendingPathComponent(fixturePath)
}
func save<T: Encodable>(object: T, in fixturePath: String) throws {
let data = try JSONEncoder().encode(object)
try data.write(to: fixtureUrl(for: fixturePath))
}
func loadFixture<T: Decodable>(in fixturePath: String, as decodableType: T.Type) throws -> T {
let data = try loadFixture(in: fixturePath)
return try JSONDecoder().decode(decodableType, from: data)
}
}
Creates unique "file name" form url including two previous folders
func createFileNameFromURL (colorUrl: URL) -> String {
var arrayFolders = colorUrl.pathComponents
// -3 because last element from url is "file name" and 2 previous are folders on server
let indx = arrayFolders.count - 3
var fileName = ""
switch indx{
case 0...:
fileName = arrayFolders[indx] + arrayFolders[indx+1] + arrayFolders[indx+2]
case -1:
fileName = arrayFolders[indx+1] + arrayFolders[indx+2]
case -2:
fileName = arrayFolders[indx+2]
default:
break
}
return fileName
}