I am able to retrieve results from a Firebase query but I am having trouble retrieving them as a dictionary to populate a tableView. Here's how I'm storing the query results:
var invites: Array<FIRDataSnapshot> = []
func getAlerts(){
let invitesRef = self.rootRef.child("invites")
let query = invitesRef.queryOrderedByChild("invitee").queryEqualToValue(currentUser?.uid)
query.observeEventType(.Value, withBlock: { snapshot in
self.invites.append(snapshot)
print(self.invites)
self.tableView.reloadData()
})
}
Printing self.invites returns the following:
[Snap (invites) {
"-KKQWErkyuehmbxom8NO" = {
invitedBy = T2k7Bm9G9RNLcHLvLlKApRbnas23;
invitee = dRJ1FqctSfTlLF8iO2ddlc9BANJ3;
role = guardian;
};
}]
I'm having trouble populating the tableView. The cell labels don't show anything:
override func tableView(tableView: UITableView, cellForRowAtIndexPath indexPath: NSIndexPath) -> UITableViewCell {
let cell = tableView.dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier("cell", forIndexPath: indexPath)
let inviteDict = invites[indexPath.row].value as! [String : AnyObject]
let role = inviteDict["role"] as? String
cell.textLabel!.text = role
return cell
}
Any ideas?
Thanks!
EDIT: Printed the dictionary to console after my function is run, and it's printing []. Why is it losing it's values?
override func viewWillAppear(animated: Bool) {
getAlerts() // inside of function prints values
print(self.invites) //prints []
}
EDIT 2: Paul's solution worked!! I added the following function to have Firebase "listen" for results! I may have to edit this to only show alerts for the logged in user, but this has at least pointed me in the right direction:
override func viewWillAppear(animated: Bool) {
getAlerts()
configureDatabase()
}
func configureDatabase() {
// Listen for new messages in the Firebase database
let ref = self.rootRef.child("invites").observeEventType(.ChildAdded, withBlock: { (snapshot) -> Void in
self.invites.append(snapshot)
self.tableView.insertRowsAtIndexPaths([NSIndexPath(forRow: self.invites.count-1, inSection: 0)], withRowAnimation: .Automatic)
})
}
Check out the friendlychat Firebase codelab for an example of populating a table view from an asynchronous call. Specifically, see viewDidLoad and configureDatabase in FCViewController.swift.
Your array will always return [ ] because Firebase is async. If you add var invites: Array<FIRDataSnapshot> = [] inside of the Firebase closure you will print the data you are looking for, but im assumming you would like to use the variable outside of the closure. in order to complete that you must create a completion within getAlerts() function. If you are not sure how to complete that do a google search and that will solve your question.
Related
I'm new to this so have just been learning about completion blocks, but I am unsure of how to do so in such a way that I get the data to then be apart of a tableview. I have seen other questions related, but regarding older versions of Swift.
I want the table view to contain all the fruit names collected from my database.
I have initialised an empty array list like so:
var fruitNames : [String] = []
Then fetch the data from my firestore database
func getNames(){
let db = Firestore.firestore()
db.collection("fruits").getDocuments() {(snapshot, error) in
if let error = error {
print("There was an error!")
} else {
for document in snapshot!.documents {
let name = document.get("name") as! String
self.fruitNames.append(name)
//completion needed
}
}
}
}
}
I have an extension added on for my tableView
extension FruitsViewController: UITableViewDataSource, UITableViewDelegate {
func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, numberOfRowsInSection section: Int) -> Int {
fruitNames.count
}
func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, cellForRowAt indexPath: IndexPath) -> UITableViewCell {
let cell = tableView.dequeueReusableCell(withIdentifier: "cell")
cell?.textLabel?.text = self.fruitNames[indexPath.row]
return cell!
}
}
Inside your completion block, you need to tell your table view to update by calling the reloadData() method. In your class, you should have a variable holding your tableView. So, your getName should look like
func getNames(){
let db = Firestore.firestore()
db.collection("fruits").getDocuments() {(snapshot, error) in
if let error = error {
print("There was an error!")
} else {
for document in snapshot!.documents {
let name = document.get("name") as! String
self.fruitNames.append(name)
//completion needed
}
self.tableView.reloadData()
}
}
}
First of all, use [weak self] in closure. Otherwise it can lead to memory leak or crashes. You should read about
automatic reference counting and memory management
closures (https://docs.swift.org/swift-book/LanguageGuide/Closures.html)
If you want to display fruit names, you should call .reloadData() on your tableView object. Then, all delegate methods like numberOfRowsInSection or cellForRowAt will be called again.
You can do something like this :
You have to take an escaping closure as a parameter to the getName() method, which would return Void :
func getName(onComplition: #escaping (_ isSuccess: Bool, _ dataList: [String]) -> Void) {
let db = Firestore.firestore()
db.collection("fruits").getDocuments() {(snapshot, error) in
if let error = error {
print("There was an error!")
onComplition(true, [])
} else {
var data = [String]()
for document in snapshot!.documents {
let name = document.get("name") as! String
data.append(name) // Here data is local variable.
}
onComplition(true, data)
}
}
}
in ViewDidLoad()
override func viewDidLoad() {
self.getName { [weak self] (isSuccess, dataList) in
guard let weakSelf = self else { return }
weakSelf.fruitNames = dataList // fruitNames is your TableViewController's instance variable
weakSelf.tableView.reloadData()
}
}
I have written it directly in IDE, please ignore if there's any syntax error
If you have written perfect code to fetch fruit names.
But your table view is already initialized and loaded with default/empty items in the table view.
You have fetched data after the table view loaded.
So solution is you have to reload your table view again.
So in the closure (After fetching and appending your data to an array) just reload the table view like below and it reloads fresh data.
tableView.reloadData()
User [weak self] or [unowned self] for closure to avoid retain cycles and it causes memory issues.
I am trying to populate a UITableView using an array and I am unable to do so. Here is what I have so far. This code is for retrieving data and storing it in the array that I am using to populate the UITableView:
func prepareForRetrieval() {
Database.database().reference().child("UserCart").child(Auth.auth().currentUser!.uid).observe(.value, with: {
(snapshot) in
for snap in snapshot.children.allObjects {
let id = snap as! DataSnapshot
self.keyArray.append(id.key)
}
self.updateCart()
})
}
func updateCart() {
for key in keyArray {
Database.database().reference().child("UserCart").child(Auth.auth().currentUser!.uid).child(key).observeSingleEvent(of: .value, with: {
(snapshot) in
let value = snapshot.value as? NSDictionary
let itemName = value?["Item Name"] as! String
let itemPrice = value?["Item Price"] as! Float
let itemQuantity = value?["Item Quantity"] as! Int
self.cartArray.append(CartData(itemName: itemName, itemQuantity: itemQuantity, itemPriceNumber: itemPrice))
print(self.cartArray.count)
})
}
}
The data is properly appending into the array and when I print the count of the array, it prints the correct count. This means that the data is there. However, when I try to populate a UITableView, it doesn't detect any data. I have the following code to make sure that there is data in the array before trying to populate the UITableView:
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
cartBrain.prepareForRetrieval()
if cartBrain.cartArray.isEmpty == false{
tableViewOutlet.dataSource = self
tableViewOutlet.reloadData()
}
else {
tableViewOutlet.isHidden = true
tableViewOutlet.isUserInteractionEnabled = false
purchaseButtonOutlet.isEnabled = false
cartEmptyLabel.text = "Your cart is empty. Please add items and check back later."
}
}
When I open the View Controller, the TableView is disabled because it doesn't detect any data. I have already set the data source to self and the thing is that when the count of the array is printed, it again prints the correct amount. I have already set the data source to self for the UITableView. Here is my code for the UITableView:
extension CartViewController: UITableViewDataSource {
func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, numberOfRowsInSection section: Int) -> Int {
return cartBrain.cartArray.count
}
func tableView(_ tableView: UITableView, cellForRowAt indexPath: IndexPath) -> UITableViewCell {
let cell = tableView.dequeueReusableCell(withIdentifier: "cartcustomcell", for: indexPath)
cell.textLabel?.text = cartBrain.cartArray[indexPath.row].itemName
cell.detailTextLabel?.text = String(cartBrain.cartArray[indexPath.row].itemQuantity)
return cell
}
}
I don't understand why the count of the array prints the correct amount meaning that there is data stored in it but when the View Controller is loaded, it detects that the array is empty. Thanks for the help and I'm sorry if the question is a bit unclear.
After appending data to cartArray in updateCart you should reloadData(), like this:
weak var tableViewOutlet: UITableView?
func updateCart() {
for key in keyArray {
Database.database().reference().child("UserCart").child(Auth.auth().currentUser!.uid).child(key).observeSingleEvent(of: .value, with: {
(snapshot) in
let value = snapshot.value as? NSDictionary
let itemName = value?["Item Name"] as! String
let itemPrice = value?["Item Price"] as! Float
let itemQuantity = value?["Item Quantity"] as! Int
self.cartArray.append(CartData(itemName: itemName, itemQuantity: itemQuantity, itemPriceNumber: itemPrice))
DispatchQueue.main.async {
self.tableViewOutlet.reloadData()
}
})
}
}
The updateCart doesn't seem to have any connection to the tableViewOutlet so you need to pass in a reference to it in your viewDidLoad like this:
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
cartBrain.tableViewOutlet = tableViewOutlet
cartBrain.prepareForRetrieval()
Note: Since you're using a for loop to trigger the async call multiple times you can use the array count to check if all the items are appended to do the reload to avoid multiple reloads.
I am a newbie to swift and firebase, I am trying to populate my tabelview with firebase data. When I run the program, nothing shows up in tableview. Any help would be gladly appreciated. This is what I got do far, tried to read the documents, but its not helping.
import UIKit
import Firebase
import FirebaseUI
class ChurchTableViewController: UITableViewController {
let firebase = Firebase(url:"https://.....com/")
var items = [NSDictionary]()
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
// Uncomment the following line to preserve selection between presentations
// self.clearsSelectionOnViewWillAppear = false
// Uncomment the following line to display an Edit button in the navigation bar for this view controller.
//self.navigationItem.rightBarButtonItem = self.editButtonItem()
}
override func viewDidAppear(animated: Bool) {
//MARK: Load data from firebsr
firebase.observeEventType(.Value, withBlock: { snapshot in
print(snapshot.value)
}, withCancelBlock: { error in
print(error.description)
})
}
override func didReceiveMemoryWarning() {
super.didReceiveMemoryWarning()
// Dispose of any resources that can be recreated.
}
// MARK: - Table view data source
override func numberOfSectionsInTableView(tableView: UITableView) -> Int {
// #warning Incomplete implementation, return the number of sections
return 1
}
override func tableView(tableView: UITableView, numberOfRowsInSection section: Int) -> Int {
// #warning Incomplete implementation, return the number of rows
return items.count
}
override func tableView(tableView: UITableView, cellForRowAtIndexPath indexPath: NSIndexPath) -> UITableViewCell {
let cell = tableView.dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier("Cell", forIndexPath: indexPath)
let dict = items[indexPath.row]
cell.textLabel?.text = dict["ChurchName"] as? String
return cell
}
You've created the observer for when some value changes in your Firebase DB, but in your closure you need to add the new items and of course reload your UITableView to synchronize the data in your app, see the following code to see a sample of how to do it with a sample data type too:
var items = [GroceryItem]()
override func viewDidAppear(animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
firebase.observeEventType(.Value, withBlock: { snapshot in
var newItems = [GroceryItem]()
for item in snapshot.children {
let itemType = GroceryItem(snapshot: item as! FDataSnapshot)
newItems.append(itemType)
}
// update your item with the new ones retrieved
self.items = newItems
// reload the data
self.tableView.reloadData()
})
}
In the below struct you can see a sample of how you can create your data type from the data returned from Firebase
GroceryItem
struct GroceryItem {
let key: String!
let name: String!
let addedByUser: String!
let ref: Firebase?
var completed: Bool!
// Initialize from arbitrary data
init(name: String, addedByUser: String, completed: Bool, key: String = "") {
self.key = key
self.name = name
self.addedByUser = addedByUser
self.completed = completed
self.ref = nil
}
init(snapshot: FDataSnapshot) {
key = snapshot.key
name = snapshot.value["name"] as! String
addedByUser = snapshot.value["addedByUser"] as! String
completed = snapshot.value["completed"] as! Bool
ref = snapshot.ref
}
}
For a deeper knowledge about how to use Firebase you can read this very good tutorial:
Firebase Tutorial: Getting Started
I hope this help you.
Check that you have set your Tableview's delegate and datasource properly, to do this, go to interface builder, cmd + right click on your tableview and drag over to the yellow heading icon in interface builder.
You should see two options, 'datasource' and 'delegate', make sure that they are both checked and then rerun your app, you should see the table populate with whatever data you've loaded
You've got three issues
1) Your not populating a datasource for your tableview. This is typically an array that is stored in the class and because it's by .value you will need to iterate over those values to get to each child nodes data
2) You are observing by .value. This will return everything in the node, all children, their children etc so you won't be able to directly read it as a string value unless that's all the node contains, as in a single key:value pair, otherwise all of they key:value pairs will be read.
3) Firebase is asynchronous so within the observe block, you need to populate the array, and then re-load the tableview
Here's the solution:
Given a structure
users
user_id_0
name: "Biff"
user_id_1
name: "Buffy"
user_id_2
name: "Skip
here's the associated code to read in each name and populate a namesArray
var namesArray: [String] = []
ref.observeSingleEventOfType(.Value, withBlock: { snapshot in
for child in snapshot.children {
let name = child.value["name"] as! String
namesArray.append(name)
}
self.myTableView.reloadData()
})
substitute your items array for the namesArray.
They key is to let Firebase load the data asynchronously before telling the tableView to refresh itself, and when using .Value, ensure you iterate over all of the children in that node with snapshot.children
This is happened because there is no data in your items array. So first inside your viewDidAppear method you need to append your Firebase data dictionaries into items array and then call tableView.reloadData().
Also check your Firebase database url is correct and you need to fetch and store data in proper format while appending to items array.
I was thinking about PFQuery.
I'm developing an App that shows a Feed to the Users and it also displays a Like counter for each Post (like a Facebook App or Instagram App).
So in my PFQueryTableViewController I have my main query, that basically show all the Posts:
override func queryForTable() -> PFQuery {
let query = PFQuery(className: "Noticias")
query.orderByDescending("createdAt")
return query
}
And I use another query to count the number of Likes on another Class in Parse that contais all the Likes.
override func tableView(tableView: UITableView, cellForRowAtIndexPath indexPath: NSIndexPath, object: PFObject?) -> PFTableViewCell? {
var cell = tableView.dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier("FeedCellIdentifier") as! FeedCell!
if cell == nil {
cell = FeedCell(style: UITableViewCellStyle.Default, reuseIdentifier: "FeedCellIdentifier")
}
let query2 = PFQuery(className:"commentsTable")
query2.whereKey("newsColumn", equalTo: object!)
query2.findObjectsInBackgroundWithBlock {
(objectus: [PFObject]?, error: NSError?) -> Void in
if error == nil {
let quantidade = objectus!.count
let commentQuantidade = String(quantidade)
cell.comentariosLabel.text = commentQuantidade
} else {
// Log details of the failure
print("Error: \(error!) \(error!.userInfo)")
}
}
This way to code works, and I achieve what I want, but! I know that I'm reusing cells, I know that this block of code is called everytime a cell appear.
And I know those facts:
A lot of query requests is sent to Parse Cloud, everytime I scroll the tableview
It's possible to see the values changing, when I'm scrolling the tableview, for example, because I'm reusing the cells a post has a value of my previous cell and then with the new query it's refreshed, this works but not look good for user experience.
So, my main doubt is, is it the right way to code? I think not, and I just want another point of view or an idea.
Thanks.
EDIT 1
As I said I've updated my count method to countObjectsInBackgroundWithBlock instead of findObjectsInBackgroundWithBlock but I'm not able to move the query to the ViewDidLoad, because I use the object to check exactly how many comments each Post have.
EDIT 2
I've embed the query to count the number of comments for each post and printing the results, now I'm think my code is better than the previous version, but I'm not able to pass the result to a label because I'm receiving a error:
Use of unresolved identifier 'commentCount'
I'm reading some documentations about Struct
Follows my updated code bellow:
import UIKit
import Social
class Functions: PFQueryTableViewController, UISearchBarDelegate {
override func shouldAutorotate() -> Bool {
return false
}
var passaValor = Int()
let swiftColor = UIColor(red: 13, green: 153, blue: 252)
struct PostObject{
let post : PFObject
let commentCount : Int
}
var posts : [PostObject] = []
// Initialise the PFQueryTable tableview
override init(style: UITableViewStyle, className: String!) {
super.init(style: style, className: className)
}
required init(coder aDecoder: NSCoder) {
super.init(coder: aDecoder)!
// The className to query on
self.parseClassName = "Noticias"
// The key of the PFObject to display in the label of the default cell style
self.textKey = "text"
// Uncomment the following line to specify the key of a PFFile on the PFObject to display in the imageView of the default cell style
self.imageKey = "image"
// Whether the built-in pull-to-refresh is enabled
self.pullToRefreshEnabled = true
// Whether the built-in pagination is enabled
self.paginationEnabled = true
// The number of objects to show per page
self.objectsPerPage = 25
}
// Define the query that will provide the data for the table view
override func queryForTable() -> PFQuery {
let query = super.queryForTable()
return query
}
override func viewWillAppear(animated: Bool) {
super.viewWillAppear(true)
loadObjects()
}
// In a storyboard-based application, you will often want to do a little preparation before navigation
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
// navigationBarItems()
let query = PFQuery(className:"Noticias")
query.findObjectsInBackgroundWithBlock {
(objects: [PFObject]?, error: NSError?) -> Void in
// The find succeeded.
print("Successfully retrieved \(objects!.count) scores.")
// Do something with the found objects
if let objects = objects {
for object in objects {
let queryCount = PFQuery(className:"commentsTable")
queryCount.whereKey("newsColumn", equalTo: object)
queryCount.countObjectsInBackgroundWithBlock {
(contagem: Int32, error: NSError?) -> Void in
let post = PostObject(object, commentCount:commentCount)
posts.append(post)
print("Post \(object.objectId!) has \(contagem) comments")
}
self.tableView.reloadData()
}
}
}
//Self Sizing Cells
tableView.estimatedRowHeight = 350.0
tableView.rowHeight = UITableViewAutomaticDimension
}
// Define the query that will provide the data for the table view
//override func tableView(tableView: UITableView, cellForRowAtIndexPath indexPath: NSIndexPath) -> UITableViewCell
override func tableView(tableView: UITableView, cellForRowAtIndexPath indexPath: NSIndexPath, object: PFObject?) -> PFTableViewCell? {
var cell = tableView.dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier("FeedCellIdentifier") as! FeedCell!
if cell == nil {
cell = FeedCell(style: UITableViewCellStyle.Default, reuseIdentifier: "FeedCellIdentifier")
}
cell?.parseObject = object
if let assuntoNoticia = object?["assunto"] as? String {
cell?.assuntoNoticia?.text = assuntoNoticia
}
if let pontos = object?["pontos"] as? Int {
let pontosPosts = String(pontos)
cell?.pontosLabel?.text = String(pontosPosts)
}
if let zonaLabel = object?["zona"] as? String {
cell?.zonaLabel?.text = zonaLabel
}
if let criticidade = object?["criticidade"] as? String {
if criticidade == "Problema"{
cell.criticidadeNoticia.backgroundColor = UIColor.redColor()
} else {
cell.criticidadeNoticia.backgroundColor = UIColor.greenColor()
}
}
return cell
}
}
And the result of print:
Successfully retrieved 5 scores.
Post wSCsTv8OnH has 4 comments
Post LbwBfjWPod has 0 comments
Post fN4ISVwqpz has 0 comments
Post 1rXdQr2A1F has 1 comments
Post eXogPeTfNu has 0 comments
Better practice would be to query all data on view load saving it into model and then read data from it on table view scroll. When processing query you can show downloading indicator or placeholder data. When query is complete you'll call tableView.reloadData()
You can accomplish this by creating a new variable like this:
var cellModels : [PFObject] = []
In your query2.findObjectsInBackgroundWithBlock:
for object in objectus{
self.cellModels.append(object)
}
self.tableView.reloadData()
And in cellForRowAtIndexPath:
let model = cellModels[indexPath.row]
// configure cell according to model
// something like cell.textLabel.text = model.text
P.S You should take a look at method countObjectsInBackgroundWithBlock if you only need to get count of objects. Because if there're a lot of e.g comments findObjectsInBackgroundWithBlock will return maximum of 1000 objects and still you won't be downloading whole objects, only one number this will speed up query and spare user's cellular plan.
Update: Also if you need to store numbers of comments you can create simple struct like this:
struct PostObject{
let post : PFObject
let commentCount : Int
}
var posts : [PostObject] = []
And when you query for you posts you loop through received objects and populate posts array.
for object in objects{
// create countObjectsInBackgroundWithBlock query to get comments count for object
// and in result block create
let post = PostObject(object, commentCount:commentCount)
posts.append(post)
}
tableView.reloadData()
And in cellForRowAtIndexPath:
let post = posts[indexPath.row]
cell.postCountLabel.text = String(post.commentCount)
// configure cell accordingly
You should do your queries before you present the information in your tableview.
I'm quite new to working with Parse and I'm building a todo list as part of a CRM. Each task in the table view shows the description, due date, and client name. The description and due date are in my Task class, as well as a pointer to the Deal class. Client is a string in the Deal class. I'm able to query the description and due date properly, but I am not able to retrieve the client attribute from within the Deal object by using includeKey. I followed the Parse documentation for includeKey.
The description and due date show up properly in the resulting table view, but not the client. The log shows client label: nil and the printed task details include <Deal: 0x7ff033d1ed40, objectId: HffKOiJrTq>, but nothing about the client attribute. How can I retrieve and assign the pointer object's attribute (client) to my label within the table view? My relevant code is below. Thank you in advance.
Edit: I've updated my code with func fetchClients() based on this SO answer, but I'm still not sure whether my function is complete or where to call it.
class TasksVC: UITableViewController {
var taskObjects:NSMutableArray! = NSMutableArray()
override func viewDidAppear(animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
println("\(PFUser.currentUser())")
self.fetchAllObjects()
self.fetchClients()
}
func fetchAllObjects() {
var query:PFQuery = PFQuery(className: "Task")
query.whereKey("username", equalTo: PFUser.currentUser()!)
query.orderByAscending("dueDate")
query.addAscendingOrder("desc")
query.includeKey("deal")
query.findObjectsInBackgroundWithBlock { (tasks: [AnyObject]!, error:NSError!) -> Void in
if (error == nil) {
var temp:NSArray = tasks! as NSArray
self.taskObjects = temp.mutableCopy() as NSMutableArray
println(tasks)
self.tableView.reloadData()
} else {
println(error?.userInfo)
}
}
}
func fetchClients() {
var task:PFObject = PFObject(className: "Task")
var deal:PFObject = task["deal"] as PFObject
deal.fetchIfNeededInBackgroundWithBlock {
(deal: PFObject!, error: NSError!) -> Void in
let client = deal["client"] as NSString
}
}
//MARK: - Tasks table view
override func numberOfSectionsInTableView(tableView: UITableView) -> Int {
return 1
}
override func tableView(tableView: UITableView, numberOfRowsInSection section: Int) -> Int {
return self.taskObjects.count
}
override func tableView(tableView: UITableView, cellForRowAtIndexPath indexPath: NSIndexPath) -> UITableViewCell {
let cell = self.tableView.dequeueReusableCellWithIdentifier("TaskCell", forIndexPath: indexPath) as TaskCell
var dateFormatter:NSDateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "M/dd/yy"
var task:PFObject = self.taskObjects.objectAtIndex(indexPath.row) as PFObject
cell.desc_Lbl?.text = task["desc"] as? String
cell.date_Lbl.text = dateFormatter.stringFromDate(task["dueDate"] as NSDate)
cell.client_Lbl?.text = task["client"] as? String
var clientLabel = cell.client_Lbl?.text
println("client label: \(clientLabel)")
return cell
}
}
If the deal column is a pointer then includeKey("deal") will get that object and populate it's properties for you. There is no need to perform a fetch of any type on top of that.
You really should be using Optionals properly though:
if let deal = task["deal"] as? PFObject {
// deal column has data
if let client = deal["client"] as? String {
// client has data
cell.client_Lbl?.text = client
}
}
Alternatively you can replace the last if let with a line like this, which handles empty values and uses a default:
cell.client_Lbl?.text = (deal["client"] as? String) ?? ""
In your posted cellForRowAtIndexPath code you are trying to read client from the task instead of from the deal: task["client"] as? String.