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Forum Discussion
joejjank
6 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Mixing Swift and Objective C
I have an application that was first developed for the IPhone and then added support for mac os. Much of this has been developed in Objective C - this is all working fine. As I add new functions I ...
- 6 years ago
Ok - thanks for the feedback. I have some common Objective C in a class that I can call from Swift so that works fine. So until I convert the entire application to swift I can live with that restriction.
Greg-DB
Dropbox Staff
First, to clarify, do you have the official Dropbox API v2 Objective-C SDK installed in your project, and that's what you're trying to call from the Swift code?
If so, and you're able to run this code and get a -999 error, I suspect you actually have that loaded successfully already. (I would expect it to fail in a different way if it was a matter of bridging between Objective-C and Swift.)
This error message may instead just be indicating that your "client" variable is going out of scope before the API call can succeed. Can you check on that? Here's a thread with the same error as an example:
https://www.dropboxforum.com/t5/API-Support-Feedback/999-quot-cancelled-quot-Error/m-p/192322#M24501
joejjank
6 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Thank Greg - I have both the Objective C and Swift API V2 loaded - is that a problem? The function is in the viewDidLoad - it purpose is the identify the files in my Backup directory on Dropbox and display them in a NSTableView. I am a little confused what I need to use - can you call the Objective C API from Swift?
override func viewDidLoad()
{
super.viewDidLoad()
let obj:DataClassOS = DataClassOS.getInstance()
let client = DropboxClient(accessToken: obj.accesstoken)
_ = client.files.listFolder(path: "/Backup")
.response { response, error in
if let result = response {
print("Folder contents:")
for entry in result.entries {
print(entry.name)
}
} else if let error = error
{
print(error)
}
}
}
- Greg-DB6 years agoDropbox Staff
The SDKs weren't designed with the intention that a single app would use both of them, but I can't say off hand if doing so would or wouldn't cause issues. I don't believe we've explicitly tested that.
You generally can import Objective-C into Swift though. Here's Apple's documentation for doing so:
And here's an old Dropbox blog post that covered how to do so, albeit for an older, now retired SDK:
https://blogs.dropbox.com/developers/2014/09/swift-apps-with-dropbox/
(For the API v2 Objective-C SDK, the import statement is instead "#import <ObjectiveDropboxOfficial/ObjectiveDropboxOfficial.h>".)
If you can get that to work for your app, that might be better, for the sake of simplicity.
In any case, based on the additional code/context you shared here, I think the specific issue you're seeing is just due to the "client" variable going out of scope, since it's only defined in "viewDidLoad". Try moving that out of "viewDidLoad" so that it won't get cleaned up before the API call completes.
- joejjank6 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Ok - thanks for the feedback. I have some common Objective C in a class that I can call from Swift so that works fine. So until I convert the entire application to swift I can live with that restriction.
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