By Xmartlabs SRL.
GenericPasswordRow
is a custom row for Eureka designed to create passwords. Its main purpose is to guide users through this process according to a set of validations.
- Features
- Visibility
- Password strength
- Hints
import Eureka
import GenericPasswordRow
class ViewController: FormViewController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
form +++ Section()
<<< GenericPasswordRow()
}
}
- iOS 9.0+
- Xcode 11.5+
- Eureka ~> 5.2.1
- If you want to contribute please feel free to submit pull requests.
- If you have a feature request please open an issue.
- If you found a bug or need help please check older issues, FAQ and threads on StackOverflow (Tag 'GenericPasswordRow') before submitting an issue..
Before contribute check the CONTRIBUTING file for more info.
If you use GenericPasswordRow in your app we would love to hear about it! Drop us a line on twitter.
Follow these steps to run Example project:
- Clone GenericPasswordRow repository
- Open terminal in the downloaded folder and run bin/setup script
- Open GenericPasswordRow workspace
- Run the Example project.
CocoaPods is a dependency manager for Cocoa projects.
To install GenericPasswordRow, simply add the following line to your Podfile:
pod 'GenericPasswordRow', '~> 3.1'
Carthage is a simple, decentralized dependency manager for Cocoa.
To install GenericPasswordRow, simply add the following line to your Cartfile:
github "EurekaCommunity/GenericPasswordRow" ~> 3.1
For basic styling like fonts, colors, margins, separators you should use cellSetup
and cellUpdate
. Otherwise, you should be able to provide a completely different design (different nib file) and reuse the already implemented logic.
var passwordValidator: PasswordValidator = DefaultPasswordValidator()
: a PasswordValidator intended to define the rules to be satisfied by the password. See Implement custom validationvar placeholder: String? = "Password"
: placeholder of password textfield.
For example you can do this:
<<< GenericPasswordRow() {
$0.passwordValidator = // instantiate your custom validator
$0.placeholder = "Create a password"
}
@IBOutlet weak var textField: UITextField!
:
Password textfield.@IBOutlet weak var visibilityButton: UIButton?
:
Visibility button intended to toggle thesecureTextEntry
property oftextField
.@IBOutlet weak var passwordStrengthView: PasswordStrengthView?
:
A subclass ofPasswordStrengthView
with the custom design of the strength indicator. See PasswordStrengthView@IBOutlet weak var hintLabel: UILabel?
:
Label used to show hints to the user while typing his password.var visibilityImage: (on: UIImage?, off: UIImage?)
:
Images to be set to the visibilityButton depending on the textField'ssecureTextEntry
state.var dynamicHeight = (collapsed: UITableViewAutomaticDimension, expanded: UITableViewAutomaticDimension)
:
Heights of the cell when collapsed (with hintLabel hidden) and expanded (hintLabel not hidden). This property is nib-specific.
You might want to follow your own design. To accomplish this you should follow these steps:
-
Create a user interface xib file and edit it with Xcode's Interface Builder. You should add a simple
UITableViewCell
and say that its class is aGenericPasswordCell
. -
Add an UITextField for the password entry and connect it to the
textField
outlet. -
[optional] Add an UIButton and connect it to the
visibilityButton
. -
[optional] Add a PasswordStrengthView subclass and connect it to the
passwordStrengthView
outlet. -
[optional] Add an UILabel and connect it to the
hintLabel
outlet. -
Specify that you want to use the newly created nib file. You can do this in two ways:
- Using RowDefaults: use this if you want to use only this custom GenericPasswordRow in your app.
GenericPasswordRow.defaultRowInitializer = { $0.cellProvider = CellProvider<GenericPasswordCell>(nibName: "MyPasswordCell", bundle: nil) }
- Or create a custom row subclassing
_GenericPasswordRow
:
final class MyPasswordRow: _GenericPasswordRow, RowType { required init(tag: String?) { super.init(tag: tag) cellProvider = CellProvider<GenericPasswordCell>(nibName: "MyPasswordCell", bundle: nil) } }
If you are providing a custom nib file, you can also provide a custom subclass of PasswordStrengthView
different from the DefaultPasswordStrengthView.
You just need to implement the following methods:
class PasswordStrengthView: UIView {
public func setPasswordValidator(validator: PasswordValidator) { }
public func updateStrength(password password: String, animated: Bool = true) { }
}
In order to provide a custom password validation you need to provide a conformance to the PasswordValidator
protocol at the passwordValidator
property of the GenericPasswordRow
instance.
protocol PasswordValidator {
var maxStrength: Double { get }
func strengthForPassword(password: String) -> Double
func hintForPassword(password: String) -> String?
func isPasswordValid(password: String) -> Bool
func colorsForStrengths() -> [Double: UIColor]
}
This validator should define the strength of any given password between zero and maxStrength
values. Also, the func colorsForStrengths() -> [Double: UIColor]
function should return a dictionary specifying key points of strength values and the associated color starting from there. See DefaultPasswordValidator.
What could be added to GenericPasswordRow:
- Implement some Eureka Validation
- Provide additional subclasses of
PasswordStrengthView
This can be found in the CHANGELOG.md file.