Well, I believe first you need to convert your object to some form of dictionary.
Let me show you an example:
class Balance: NSObject {
var details: String
var date: Date
var amount: Double
func asDictionary() -> [String: AnyObject] {
return ["details": details as AnyObject, "date": "\(date)" as AnyObject, "amount": amount as AnyObject]
}
}
You use the method asDictionary
to convert your objects to a dictionary so that you can serialize it into JSON.
Suppose you have a list of Balance objects.
You need to first convert each of those objects to dictionary using the method above, and then try to serialize the objects to JSON. Note that the list is now a list of [String: AnyObject] dictionaries, and not a list of Balance objects.
var resStr = ""
var list: [[String: AnyObject]] = [balance1.asDictionary(), balance2.asDictionary()]
do {
let data = try JSONSerialization.data(withJSONObject: list, options: .prettyPrinted)
resStr = String.init(data: data, encoding: .utf8) ?? ""
} catch { fatalError("Error BALANCE HISTORY ") }
For certain types, like the date field, you need to find some way to convert it to String, as the JSONSerializer is very picky. In this case I just used String interpolation, but the format may not be what you want it to be like.
If you want to convert back to a Balance object from JSON, first you need to get JSON into a dictionary, and then check for each field if it exists, and if so, construct your Balance object.
Supposing you have converted your JSON data into a dictionary in the variable named dict
, you could do something like the following:
// supposing you have a single object in dict
var balance: Balance
balance.details = dict["details"]
balance.amount = dict["amount"]
balance.date = parseDate(dict["date"])
Supposing you have a function parseDate to parse the date from String into a Date object.
You can take a look here for converting String date into an object: Use SwiftyJSON to deserialize NSDate