Swift-ios-skills swift-codable
Implement Swift Codable models for JSON and property-list encoding and decoding with JSONDecoder, JSONEncoder, CodingKeys, and custom init(from:) or encode(to:). Use when parsing API responses, remapping keys, flattening nested JSON, handling date or data decoding strategies, decoding heterogeneous arrays, or integrating Codable with URLSession, SwiftData, or UserDefaults.
git clone https://github.com/dpearson2699/swift-ios-skills
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/dpearson2699/swift-ios-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/swift-codable" ~/.claude/skills/dpearson2699-swift-ios-skills-swift-codable && rm -rf "$T"
skills/swift-codable/SKILL.mdSwift Codable
Encode and decode Swift types using
Codable (Encodable & Decodable) with
JSONEncoder, JSONDecoder, and related APIs. Targets Swift 6.3 / iOS 26+.
Contents
- Basic Conformance
- Custom CodingKeys
- Custom Decoding and Encoding
- Nested and Flattened Containers
- Heterogeneous Arrays
- Date Decoding Strategies
- Data and Key Strategies
- Lossy Array Decoding
- Single Value Containers
- Default Values for Missing Keys
- Encoder and Decoder Configuration
- Codable with URLSession
- Codable with SwiftData
- Codable with UserDefaults
- Common Mistakes
- Review Checklist
- References
Basic Conformance
When all stored properties are themselves
Codable, the compiler synthesizes
conformance automatically:
struct User: Codable { let id: Int let name: String let email: String let isVerified: Bool } let user = try JSONDecoder().decode(User.self, from: jsonData) let encoded = try JSONEncoder().encode(user)
Prefer
Decodable for read-only API responses and Encodable for write-only.
Use Codable only when both directions are required.
Custom CodingKeys
Rename JSON keys without writing a custom decoder by declaring a
CodingKeys
enum:
struct Product: Codable { let id: Int let displayName: String let imageURL: URL let priceInCents: Int enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case id case displayName = "display_name" case imageURL = "image_url" case priceInCents = "price_in_cents" } }
Every stored property must appear in the enum. Omitting a property from
CodingKeys excludes it from encoding/decoding -- provide a default value or
compute it separately.
Custom Decoding and Encoding
Override
init(from:) and encode(to:) for transformations the synthesized
conformance cannot handle:
struct Event: Codable { let name: String let timestamp: Date let tags: [String] enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case name, timestamp, tags } init(from decoder: Decoder) throws { let container = try decoder.container(keyedBy: CodingKeys.self) name = try container.decode(String.self, forKey: .name) // Decode Unix timestamp as Double, convert to Date let epoch = try container.decode(Double.self, forKey: .timestamp) timestamp = Date(timeIntervalSince1970: epoch) // Default to empty array when key is missing tags = try container.decodeIfPresent([String].self, forKey: .tags) ?? [] } func encode(to encoder: Encoder) throws { var container = encoder.container(keyedBy: CodingKeys.self) try container.encode(name, forKey: .name) try container.encode(timestamp.timeIntervalSince1970, forKey: .timestamp) try container.encode(tags, forKey: .tags) } }
Nested and Flattened Containers
Use
nestedContainer(keyedBy:forKey:) to navigate and flatten nested JSON:
// JSON: { "id": 1, "location": { "lat": 37.7749, "lng": -122.4194 } } struct Place: Decodable { let id: Int let latitude: Double let longitude: Double enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case id, location } enum LocationKeys: String, CodingKey { case lat, lng } init(from decoder: Decoder) throws { let container = try decoder.container(keyedBy: CodingKeys.self) id = try container.decode(Int.self, forKey: .id) let location = try container.nestedContainer( keyedBy: LocationKeys.self, forKey: .location) latitude = try location.decode(Double.self, forKey: .lat) longitude = try location.decode(Double.self, forKey: .lng) } }
Chain multiple
nestedContainer calls to flatten deeply nested structures.
Also use nestedUnkeyedContainer(forKey:) for nested arrays.
Heterogeneous Arrays
Decode arrays of mixed types using a discriminator field:
// JSON: [{"type":"text","content":"Hello"},{"type":"image","url":"pic.jpg"}] enum ContentBlock: Decodable { case text(String) case image(URL) enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case type, content, url } init(from decoder: Decoder) throws { let container = try decoder.container(keyedBy: CodingKeys.self) let type = try container.decode(String.self, forKey: .type) switch type { case "text": let content = try container.decode(String.self, forKey: .content) self = .text(content) case "image": let url = try container.decode(URL.self, forKey: .url) self = .image(url) default: throw DecodingError.dataCorruptedError( forKey: .type, in: container, debugDescription: "Unknown type: \(type)") } } } let blocks = try JSONDecoder().decode([ContentBlock].self, from: jsonData)
Date Decoding Strategies
Configure
JSONDecoder.dateDecodingStrategy to match your API:
let decoder = JSONDecoder() // ISO 8601 (e.g., "2024-03-15T10:30:00Z") decoder.dateDecodingStrategy = .iso8601 // Unix timestamp in seconds (e.g., 1710499800) decoder.dateDecodingStrategy = .secondsSince1970 // Custom DateFormatter let formatter = DateFormatter() formatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd" formatter.locale = Locale(identifier: "en_US_POSIX") formatter.timeZone = TimeZone(secondsFromGMT: 0) decoder.dateDecodingStrategy = .formatted(formatter) // Custom closure for multiple formats decoder.dateDecodingStrategy = .custom { decoder in let container = try decoder.singleValueContainer() let string = try container.decode(String.self) if let date = ISO8601DateFormatter().date(from: string) { return date } throw DecodingError.dataCorruptedError( in: container, debugDescription: "Cannot decode date: \(string)") }
Set the matching strategy on
JSONEncoder:
encoder.dateEncodingStrategy = .iso8601
Data and Key Strategies
let decoder = JSONDecoder() decoder.dataDecodingStrategy = .base64 // Base64-encoded Data fields decoder.keyDecodingStrategy = .convertFromSnakeCase // snake_case -> camelCase // {"user_name": "Alice"} maps to `var userName: String` -- no CodingKeys needed let encoder = JSONEncoder() encoder.dataEncodingStrategy = .base64 encoder.keyEncodingStrategy = .convertToSnakeCase
Lossy Array Decoding
By default, one invalid element fails the entire array. Use a wrapper to skip invalid elements:
struct LossyArray<Element: Decodable>: Decodable { let elements: [Element] init(from decoder: Decoder) throws { var container = try decoder.unkeyedContainer() var elements: [Element] = [] while !container.isAtEnd { if let element = try? container.decode(Element.self) { elements.append(element) } else { _ = try? container.decode(AnyCodableValue.self) // advance past bad element } } self.elements = elements } } private struct AnyCodableValue: Decodable {}
Single Value Containers
Wrap primitives for type safety using
singleValueContainer():
struct UserID: Codable, Hashable { let rawValue: String init(_ rawValue: String) { self.rawValue = rawValue } init(from decoder: Decoder) throws { let container = try decoder.singleValueContainer() rawValue = try container.decode(String.self) } func encode(to encoder: Encoder) throws { var container = encoder.singleValueContainer() try container.encode(rawValue) } } // JSON: "usr_abc123" decodes directly to UserID
Default Values for Missing Keys
Use
decodeIfPresent with nil-coalescing to provide defaults:
struct Settings: Decodable { let theme: String let fontSize: Int let notificationsEnabled: Bool enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case theme, fontSize = "font_size" case notificationsEnabled = "notifications_enabled" } init(from decoder: Decoder) throws { let container = try decoder.container(keyedBy: CodingKeys.self) theme = try container.decodeIfPresent(String.self, forKey: .theme) ?? "system" fontSize = try container.decodeIfPresent(Int.self, forKey: .fontSize) ?? 16 notificationsEnabled = try container.decodeIfPresent( Bool.self, forKey: .notificationsEnabled) ?? true } }
Encoder and Decoder Configuration
let encoder = JSONEncoder() encoder.outputFormatting = [.prettyPrinted, .sortedKeys, .withoutEscapingSlashes] // Non-conforming floats (NaN, Infinity are not valid JSON) encoder.nonConformingFloatEncodingStrategy = .convertToString( positiveInfinity: "Infinity", negativeInfinity: "-Infinity", nan: "NaN") decoder.nonConformingFloatDecodingStrategy = .convertFromString( positiveInfinity: "Infinity", negativeInfinity: "-Infinity", nan: "NaN")
PropertyListEncoder / PropertyListDecoder
let plistEncoder = PropertyListEncoder() plistEncoder.outputFormat = .xml // or .binary let data = try plistEncoder.encode(settings) let decoded = try PropertyListDecoder().decode(Settings.self, from: data)
Codable with URLSession
func fetchUser(id: Int) async throws -> User { let url = URL(string: "https://api.example.com/users/\(id)")! let (data, response) = try await URLSession.shared.data(from: url) guard let http = response as? HTTPURLResponse, (200...299).contains(http.statusCode) else { throw APIError.invalidResponse } let decoder = JSONDecoder() decoder.keyDecodingStrategy = .convertFromSnakeCase decoder.dateDecodingStrategy = .iso8601 return try decoder.decode(User.self, from: data) } // Generic API envelope for wrapped responses struct APIResponse<T: Decodable>: Decodable { let data: T let meta: Meta? struct Meta: Decodable { let page: Int; let totalPages: Int } } let users = try decoder.decode(APIResponse<[User]>.self, from: data).data
Codable with SwiftData
Codable structs work as composite attributes in SwiftData models. In iOS 18+,
SwiftData natively supports them without explicit @Attribute(.transformable):
struct Address: Codable { var street: String var city: String var zipCode: String } @Model class Contact { var name: String var address: Address? // Codable struct stored as composite attribute init(name: String, address: Address? = nil) { self.name = name; self.address = address } }
Codable with UserDefaults
Store
Codable values via RawRepresentable for @AppStorage:
struct UserPreferences: Codable { var showOnboarding: Bool = true var accentColor: String = "blue" } extension UserPreferences: RawRepresentable { init?(rawValue: String) { guard let data = rawValue.data(using: .utf8), let decoded = try? JSONDecoder().decode(Self.self, from: data) else { return nil } self = decoded } var rawValue: String { guard let data = try? JSONEncoder().encode(self), let string = String(data: data, encoding: .utf8) else { return "{}" } return string } } struct SettingsView: View { @AppStorage("userPrefs") private var prefs = UserPreferences() var body: some View { Toggle("Show Onboarding", isOn: $prefs.showOnboarding) } }
Common Mistakes
1. Not handling missing optional keys:
// DON'T -- crashes if key is absent let value = try container.decode(String.self, forKey: .bio) // DO -- returns nil for missing keys let value = try container.decodeIfPresent(String.self, forKey: .bio) ?? ""
2. Failing entire array when one element is invalid:
// DON'T -- one bad element kills the whole decode let items = try container.decode([Item].self, forKey: .items) // DO -- use LossyArray or decode elements individually let items = try container.decode(LossyArray<Item>.self, forKey: .items).elements
3. Date strategy mismatch:
// DON'T -- default strategy expects Double, but API sends ISO string let decoder = JSONDecoder() // dateDecodingStrategy defaults to .deferredToDate // DO -- set strategy to match your API format decoder.dateDecodingStrategy = .iso8601
4. Force-unwrapping decoded optionals:
// DON'T let user = try? decoder.decode(User.self, from: data) print(user!.name) // DO guard let user = try? decoder.decode(User.self, from: data) else { return }
5. Using Codable when only Decodable is needed:
// DON'T -- unnecessarily constrains the type to also be Encodable struct APIResponse: Codable { let id: Int; let message: String } // DO -- use Decodable for read-only API responses struct APIResponse: Decodable { let id: Int; let message: String }
6. Manual CodingKeys for simple snake_case APIs:
// DON'T -- verbose boilerplate for every model enum CodingKeys: String, CodingKey { case userName = "user_name" case avatarUrl = "avatar_url" } // DO -- configure once on the decoder decoder.keyDecodingStrategy = .convertFromSnakeCase
Review Checklist
- Types conform to
only when encoding is not neededDecodable -
used with defaults for optional or missing keysdecodeIfPresent -
used instead of manual CodingKeys for simple snake_case APIskeyDecodingStrategy = .convertFromSnakeCase -
matches the API date formatdateDecodingStrategy - Arrays of unreliable data use lossy decoding to skip invalid elements
- Custom
validates and transforms data instead of post-decode fixupsinit(from:) -
includesJSONEncoder.outputFormatting
for deterministic test output.sortedKeys - Wrapper types (UserID, etc.) use
for clean JSONsingleValueContainer - Generic
wrapper used for consistent API envelope handlingAPIResponse<T> - No force-unwrapping of decoded values
-
Codable types conform to@AppStorageRawRepresentable - SwiftData composite attributes use
structsCodable
References
- Codable -- protocol combining Encodable and Decodable
- JSONDecoder -- decodes JSON data into Codable types
- JSONEncoder -- encodes Codable types as JSON data
- CodingKey -- protocol for encoding/decoding keys
- Encoding and Decoding Custom Types -- Apple guide on custom Codable conformance
- Using JSON with Custom Types -- Apple sample code for JSON patterns