An iOS/OSX bridge for sending messages between Obj-C and JavaScript in UIWebViews/WebViews.
WebViewJavascriptBridge is used by a range of companies and projects. This is a small and incomplete sample list:
- Facebook Messenger
- Facebook Paper
- Yardsale
- EverTrue
- Game Insight
- Sush.io
- Imbed
- CareZone
- Hemlig
- Altralogica
- 鼎盛中华
- FRIL
- 留白·WHITE
Add this to your podfile and run pod install
to install:
`pod 'WebViewJavascriptBridge', '~> 5.0'`
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".
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:
- Import the header file and declare an ivar property:
#import "WebViewJavascriptBridge.h"
...
@property WebViewJavascriptBridge* bridge;
- Instantiate WebViewJavascriptBridge with a UIWebView (iOS) or WebView (OSX):
self.bridge = [WebViewJavascriptBridge bridgeForWebView:webView];
- 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);
}];
- 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)
}
- 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)
})
})
(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
.
- Import the header file:
#import "WKWebViewJavascriptBridge.h"
- Instantiate WKWebViewJavascriptBridge and with a WKWebView object
WKWebViewJavascriptBridge* bridge = [WKWebViewJavascriptBridge bridgeForWebView:webView];
This library relies on ARC, so if you use ARC in you project, all works fine. But if your project have no ARC support, be sure to do next steps:
-
In your Xcode project open project settings -> 'Build Phases'
-
Expand 'Compile Sources' header and find all *.m files which are belongs to this library. Make attention on the 'Compiler Flags' in front of each source file in this list
-
For each file add '-fobjc-arc' flag
Now all WVJB files will be compiled with ARC support.
Contributors: https://github.com/marcuswestin/WebViewJavascriptBridge/graphs/contributors
Forks: https://github.com/marcuswestin/WebViewJavascriptBridge/network/members
Create a javascript bridge for the given web view.
Example:
[WebViewJavascriptBridge bridgeForWebView:webView];
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 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);
}];
Optionally, set a UIWebViewDelegate
if you need to respond to the web view's lifecycle events.
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())
})
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)
})