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An iOS/OSX bridge for sending messages between Obj-C and JavaScript in UIWebViews/WebViews

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WebViewJavascriptBridge

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An iOS/OSX bridge for sending messages between Obj-C and JavaScript in UIWebViews/WebViews.

Who uses WebViewJavascriptBridge?

WebViewJavascriptBridge is used by a range of companies and projects. This is a small and incomplete sample list:

Installation (iOS & OSX)

Installation with CocoaPods

Add this to your podfile and run pod install to install:

`pod 'WebViewJavascriptBridge', '~> 5.0'`

Manual installation

Drag the WebViewJavascriptBridge folder into your project.

In the dialog that appears, uncheck "Copy items into destination group's folder" and select "Create groups for any folders".

Examples

See the Example Apps/ folder. Open either the iOS or OSX project and hit run to see it in action.

To use a WebViewJavascriptBridge in your own project:

Usage

  1. Import the header file and declare an ivar property:
#import "WebViewJavascriptBridge.h"

...

@property WebViewJavascriptBridge* bridge;
  1. Instantiate WebViewJavascriptBridge with a UIWebView (iOS) or WebView (OSX):
self.bridge = [WebViewJavascriptBridge bridgeForWebView:webView];
  1. Register a handler in ObjC, and call a JS handler:
[self.bridge registerHandler:@"ObjC Echo" handler:^(id data, WVJBResponseCallback responseCallback) {
	NSLog(@"ObjC Echo called with: %@", data);
	responseCallback(data);
}];
[self.bridge callHandler:@"JS Echo" responseCallback:^(id responseData) {
	NSLog(@"ObjC received response: %@", responseData);
}];
  1. Copy and paste setupWebViewJavascriptBridge into your JS:
function setupWebViewJavascriptBridge(callback) {
	if (window.WebViewJavascriptBridge) { return callback(WebViewJavascriptBridge); }
	if (window.WVJBCallbacks) { return window.WVJBCallbacks.push(callback); }
	window.WVJBCallbacks = [callback];
	var WVJBIframe = document.createElement('iframe');
	WVJBIframe.style.display = 'none';
	WVJBIframe.src = 'wvjbscheme://__BRIDGE_LOADED__';
	document.documentElement.appendChild(WVJBIframe);
	setTimeout(function() { document.documentElement.removeChild(WVJBIframe) }, 0)
}
  1. Finally, call setupWebViewJavascriptBridge and then use the bridge to register handlers and call ObjC handlers:
setupWebViewJavascriptBridge(function(bridge) {
	
	/* Initialize your app here */

	bridge.registerHandler('JS Echo', function(data, responseCallback) {
		console.log("JS Echo called with:", data)
		responseCallback(data)
	})
	bridge.callHandler('ObjC Echo', function responseCallback(responseData) {
		console.log("JS received response:", responseData)
	})
})

WKWebView Support (iOS 8+ & OS 10.10+)

(WARNING: WKWebView still has bugs and missing network APIs. It may not be a simple drop-in replacement).

WebViewJavascriptBridge supports WKWebView for iOS 8 and OSX Yosemite. In order to use WKWebView you need to instantiate the WKWebViewJavascriptBridge. The rest of the WKWebViewJavascriptBridge API is the same as WebViewJavascriptBridge.

  1. Import the header file:
#import "WKWebViewJavascriptBridge.h"
  1. Instantiate WKWebViewJavascriptBridge and with a WKWebView object
WKWebViewJavascriptBridge* bridge = [WKWebViewJavascriptBridge bridgeForWebView:webView];

Contributors & Forks

Contributors: https://github.com/marcuswestin/WebViewJavascriptBridge/graphs/contributors

Forks: https://github.com/marcuswestin/WebViewJavascriptBridge/network/members

API Reference

ObjC API

[WebViewJavascriptBridge bridgeForWebView:(UIWebView/WebView*)webview

Create a javascript bridge for the given web view.

Example:

[WebViewJavascriptBridge bridgeForWebView:webView];
[bridge registerHandler:(NSString*)handlerName handler:(WVJBHandler)handler]

Register a handler called handlerName. The javascript can then call this handler with WebViewJavascriptBridge.callHandler("handlerName").

Example:

[self.bridge registerHandler:@"getScreenHeight" handler:^(id data, WVJBResponseCallback responseCallback) {
	responseCallback([NSNumber numberWithInt:[UIScreen mainScreen].bounds.size.height]);
}];
[self.bridge registerHandler:@"log" handler:^(id data, WVJBResponseCallback responseCallback) {
	NSLog(@"Log: %@", data);
}];
[bridge callHandler:(NSString*)handlerName data:(id)data]
[bridge callHandler:(NSString*)handlerName data:(id)data responseCallback:(WVJBResponseCallback)callback]

Call the javascript handler called handlerName. If a responseCallback block is given the javascript handler can respond.

Example:

[self.bridge callHandler:@"showAlert" data:@"Hi from ObjC to JS!"];
[self.bridge callHandler:@"getCurrentPageUrl" data:nil responseCallback:^(id responseData) {
	NSLog(@"Current UIWebView page URL is: %@", responseData);
}];

[bridge setWebViewDelegate:UIWebViewDelegate*)webViewDelegate]

Optionally, set a UIWebViewDelegate if you need to respond to the web view's lifecycle events.

Javascript API

bridge.registerHandler("handlerName", function(responseData) { ... })

Register a handler called handlerName. The ObjC can then call this handler with [bridge callHandler:"handlerName" data:@"Foo"] and [bridge callHandler:"handlerName" data:@"Foo" responseCallback:^(id responseData) { ... }]

Example:

bridge.registerHandler("showAlert", function(data) { alert(data) })
bridge.registerHandler("getCurrentPageUrl", function(data, responseCallback) {
	responseCallback(document.location.toString())
})
bridge.callHander("handlerName", data)
bridge.callHander("handlerName", data, function responseCallback(responseData) { ... })

Call an ObjC handler called handlerName. If a responseCallback function is given the ObjC handler can respond.

Example:

bridge.callHandler("Log", "Foo")
bridge.callHandler("getScreenHeight", null, function(response) {
	alert('Screen height:' + response)
})

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An iOS/OSX bridge for sending messages between Obj-C and JavaScript in UIWebViews/WebViews

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