Write Data - SwiftUI
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Perform a Quick Write
In addition to performing writes inside a transaction block, the Realm Swift SDK offers a convenience feature to enable quick writes without explicitly performing a write transaction.
When you use the @ObservedRealmObject
or @ObservedResults
property
wrappers, you can implicitly open a write transaction. Use the $
operator
to create a two-way binding to the state object. Then, when you make changes
to the bound object or collection, you initiate an implicit write.
The Realm SwiftUI property wrappers work with frozen data to provide thread safety. When you use $
to
create a two-way binding, the Realm Swift SDK manages thawing the
frozen objects so you can write to them.
Update an Object's Properties
In this example, we create a two-way binding with one of the state object's
properties. $dog.favoriteToy
creates a binding to the model Dog
object's favoriteToy
property
When the app user updates that field in this example, Realm opens an implicit write transaction and saves the new value to the database.
struct EditDogDetails: View { var dog: Dog var body: some View { VStack { Text(dog.name) .font(.title2) TextField("Favorite toy", text: $dog.favoriteToy) } } }
Add or Remove Objects in an ObservedResults Collection
While a regular Realm Results collection is immutable, ObservedResults is a mutable collection that allows you to perform writes using a two-way binding. When you update the bound collection, Realm opens an implicit write transaction and saves the changes to the collection.
In this example, we remove an element from the results set using
$dogs.remove
in the onDelete
. Using the $dogs
here creates a
two-way binding to a BoundCollection
that lets us mutate the
@ObservedResults
dogs
collection.
We add an item to the results using $dogs.append
in the
addDogButton
.
These actions write directly to the @ObservedResults
collection.
struct DogsListView: View { Dog.self) var dogs ( var body: some View { NavigationView { VStack { // The list shows the dogs in the realm. List { ForEach(dogs) { dog in DogRow(dog: dog) // Because `$dogs` here accesses an ObservedResults // collection, we can remove the specific dog from the collection. // Regular Realm Results are immutable, but you can write directly // to an `@ObservedResults` collection. }.onDelete(perform: $dogs.remove) }.listStyle(GroupedListStyle()) .navigationBarTitle("Dogs", displayMode: .large) .navigationBarBackButtonHidden(true) // Action bar at bottom contains Add button. HStack { Spacer() Button(action: { // The bound collection automatically // handles write transactions, so we can // append directly to it. This example assumes // we have some values to populate the Dog object. $dogs.append(Dog(value: ["name":"Bandido"])) }) { Image(systemName: "plus") } .accessibilityIdentifier("addDogButton") }.padding() } } } }
Note
The @ObservedResults
property wrapper is intended for use in a
SwiftUI View. If you want to observe results in a view model, register
a change listener.
Append an Object to a List
When you have a two-way binding with an @ObservedRealmObject
that has
a list property, you can add new objects to the list.
In this example, the Person
object has a list property that forms a
to-many relationship with one or more dogs.
class Person: Object, ObjectKeyIdentifiable { true) var _id: ObjectId (primaryKey: var firstName = "" var lastName = "" ... var dogs: List<Dog> }
When the user presses the Save
button, this:
Creates a
Dog
object with the details that the user has enteredAppends the
Dog
object to thePerson
object'sdogs
list
struct AddDogToPersonView: View { var person: Person var isInAddDogView: Bool var name = "" var breed = "" var weight = 0 var favoriteToy = "" var profileImageUrl: URL? var body: some View { Form { TextField("Dog's name", text: $name) TextField("Dog's breed", text: $breed) TextField("Dog's weight", value: $weight, format: .number) TextField("Dog's favorite toy", text: $favoriteToy) TextField("Image link", value: $profileImageUrl, format: .url) .keyboardType(.URL) .textInputAutocapitalization(.never) .disableAutocorrection(true) Section { Button(action: { let dog = createDog(name: name, breed: breed, weight: weight, favoriteToy: favoriteToy, profileImageUrl: profileImageUrl) $person.dogs.append(dog) isInAddDogView.toggle() }) { Text("Save") } Button(action: { isInAddDogView.toggle() }) { Text("Cancel") } } } } }
Use Create to Copy an Object Into the Realm
There may be times when you create a new object, and set one of its properties to an object that already exists in the realm. Then, when you go to add the new object to the realm, you see an error similar to:
Object is already managed by another Realm. Use create instead to copy it into this Realm.
When this occurs, you can use the .create
method to initialize the object, and use modified: .update
to set its
property to the existing object.
Example
Consider a version of the DoggoDB Dog
model where the favoriteToy
property isn't just a String
, but is an optional DogToy
object:
class Dog: Object, ObjectKeyIdentifiable { true) var _id: UUID (primaryKey: var name = "" ... var favoriteToy: DogToy? ... }
When your app goes to create a new Dog
object, perhaps it checks to see
if the DogToy
already exists in the realm, and then set the favoriteToy
property to the existing dog toy.
When you go to append the new Dog
to the Person
object, you may
see an error similar to:
Object is already managed by another Realm. Use create instead to copy it into this Realm.
The Dog
object remains unmanaged until you append it to the Person
object's dogs
property. When the Realm Swift SDK checks the Dog
object to find the realm that is currently managing it, it finds nothing.
When you use the $
notation to perform a quick write that appends the
Dog
object to the Person
object, this write uses the realm it has
access to in the view. This is a realm instance implicitly opened by
the @ObservedRealmObject
or @ObservedResults
property wrapper.
The existing DogToy
object, however, may be managed by a different
realm instance.
To solve this error, use the .create
method when you initialize the Dog
object, and use
modified: .update
to set its favoriteToy
value to the existing
object:
// When working with an `@ObservedRealmObject` `Person`, this is a frozen object. // Thaw the object and get its realm to perform the write to append the new dog. let thawedPersonRealm = frozenPerson.thaw()!.realm! try! thawedPersonRealm.write { // Use the .create method with `update: .modified` to copy the // existing object into the realm let dog = thawedPersonRealm.create(Dog.self, value: ["name": "Maui", "favoriteToy": wubba], update: .modified) person.dogs.append(dog) }
Perform an Explicit Write
In some cases, you may want or need to explicitly perform a write transaction
instead of using the implicit $
to perform a quick write. You may want
to do this when:
You need to look up additional objects to perform a write
You need to perform a write to objects you don't have access to in the view
If you pass an object you are observing with @ObservedRealmObject
or
@ObservedResults
into a function where you perform an explicit write
transaction that modifies the object, you must thaw it first.
let thawedCompany = company.thaw()!
You can access the realm that is managing the object or objects by calling
.realm
on the object or collection:
let realm = company.realm!.thaw()
Because the SwiftUI property wrappers use frozen objects, you must thaw the realm before you can write to it.
Example
Consider a version of the DoggoDB app where a Company
object
has a list of Employee
objects. Each Employee
has a list of
Dog
objects. But for business reasons, you also wanted to have a
list of Dog
objects available directly on the Company
object,
without being associated with an Employee
. The model might look
something like:
class Company: Object, ObjectKeyIdentifiable { true) var _id: ObjectId (primaryKey: var companyName = "" var employees: List<Employee> var dogs: List<Dog> }
Consider a view where you have access to the Company
object, but
want to perform an explicit write to add an existing dog to an existing
employee. Your function might look something like:
// The `frozenCompany` here represents an `@ObservedRealmObject var company: Company` performAnExplicitWrite(company: frozenCompany, employeeName: "Dachary", dogName: "Maui") func performAnExplicitWrite(company: Company, employeeName: String, dogName: String) { // Get the realm that is managing the `Company` object you passed in. // Thaw the realm so you can write to it. let realm = company.realm!.thaw() // Thawing the `Company` object that you passed in also thaws the objects in its List properties. // This lets you append the `Dog` to the `Employee` without individually thawing both of them. let thawedCompany = company.thaw()! let thisEmployee = thawedCompany.employees.where { $0.name == employeeName }.first! let thisDog = thawedCompany.dogs.where { $0.name == dogName }.first! try! realm.write { thisEmployee.dogs.append(thisDog) } }