# Firebase API Guidelines This document builds upon the design guidelines provided by [Swift's official API design guidelines][1] and the [Google Swift Style Guide][2]. It is essential to be familiar with these resources before proceeding with the API proposal process. If Objective-C is required, additionally refer to the [Google Objective-C Style Guide][3]. ## Guidance ### New APIs should be Swift-only Swift is the preferred language for Apple development, so new Firebase APIs should be fully optimized for Swift. When designing new APIs, consider whether they can be implemented in Swift only. If an Objective-C API is required, it should be carefully considered and justified. Note that Swift and Objective-C are interoperable, and a module's public Objective-C API will be exposed to Swift via a generated Swift interface. In some cases where the public Objective-C API surface is added to, the corresponding generated Swift interface should be manually refined to be more idiomatic. Apple provides a [guide][4] for improving such Objective-C API declarations for Swift. ### Include Swift code samples It is important for new APIs to be as easy to use in Swift as possible. When creating a proposal, prioritize Swift code samples to demonstrate the new API's usage. ### Async API should be written in async/await form Swift has built-in [support][5] for writing asynchronous code. If a callback-based API is required, it should be carefully considered and justified. Callbacks are still useful for capturing work to be done later, like for example, an event handler like SwiftUI's [`onSubmit`][6] view modifier. ```swift // ✔ Preferred async/await form. public func fetchData() async throws -> Data { ... } // x Pre Swift Structured Concurrency. No longer preferred. public func fetchData(completion: (Data, any Error) -> Void) { ... } ``` ### New APIs should be Sendable A [Sendable][7] type is one that is thread-safe and can be shared safely across multiple concurrency contexts. The requirements for conforming to the Sendable protocol vary depending on the type (class, actor, enum, struct, etc.). Swift 6 introduces strict concurrency checking and enforces Sendable types in asynchronous code. If applicable, new APIs should be Sendable and designed to be used in an async context (e.g. `Task`). ### Access Control New Swift APIs should use the `public` access level over `open`. The `open` access level allows for subclasses to override the API. Additionally, new Swift classes should be `final` to prevent clients from subclassing, unless otherwise justified. ### API Availability By design, an API may not be available on a given Apple platform. Swift supports platform-specific compilation and runtime checks. Code can be conditionally compiled for only iOS by wrapping it with `#if os(iOS)and #endif`. For more info, refer to [NSHipster's guide][8]. #### Platform Versioning Specification For code that builds on all platforms but should only be available on select platforms, use the `@available` declaration attribute discussed in [NSHipster's guide][9]. Firebase's main distribution channel, Swift Package Manager, only supports a single minimum supported version for all products. This minimum supported version will correspond to Crashlytics and Analytics, which historically share a minimum supported version that is lower than the rest of Firebase. When adding a new API to the rest of Firebase, refer to the minimum supported versions in the product's CocoaPods podspec, and declare it on the API's signature via the [`@available`][9] declaration attribute. ```swift @available(iOS 13, tvOS 13, macOS 10.15, macCatalyst 13, watchOS 7, *) func myNewAPI() { ... } ``` ### Constants In Objective-C, constants were usually defined at the global level. In Swift, constants can instead be grouped under a case-less enum. The benefit of a case-less enum over a struct or class is that a case-less enum cannot be initialized. Additionally, Swift constants do not contain a "k" prefix. ```swift public enum NetworkConstants { public static let httpPostMethod = "POST" public static let httpGetMethod = "GET" } ``` ### Minimizing optionals Unlike Objective-C, Swift handles nullability in a type safe way using [optionals][10]. While useful, avoid overusing them as they can complicate the callsite. ### Structs over enums for backwards compatibility {:#structs-enums} Adding a case to a Swift enum is a breaking change for clients switching over the enum's cases. Enums should be chosen when they are considered frozen or very unlikely to be changed (as major version releases occur about once a year). An alternative to using enums is to use structs. The following PRs use structs to model cases similar to how an enum does. One downside to this approach is that clients switching over a struct do not get a compile time check ensuring each case is handled. 1. [firebase-ios-sdk/13728][11] 1. [firebase-ios-sdk/13976][12] ### Avoid Any, AnyObject, and NS-prefixed types {:#avoid-any,} In Swift, `Any` represents an instance of a reference or value type, while `AnyObject` represents reference types exclusively (making it similar to `id` in Objective-C). NS-prefixed types like `NSString` or `NSNumber` are reference types bridged from Objective-C. None of these should be used in the public Swift API. Using `Any` and `AnyObject` can make APIs harder to work with due to their lack of type safety and ambiguousness. NS-prefixed types on the other hand should be swapped \out for their corresponding Swift value type like `String` for `NSString`. For example, if a public API's signature uses a dictionary whose values should be either a `String` or `Int`, consider modeling this with an enum or struct rather than `Any`. ```swift public struct CustomValue { public static func string(_ string: String) -> Self { ... } public static func integer(_ integer: Int) -> Self { ... } } func setValues(_ values: [String: CustomValue]) async throws { ... } ``` ### Documentation New APIs should have corresponding documentation using [Swift-flavored Markdown][13]. Xcode can generate a documentation block's structure when the cursor is in the method signature and ⌥ ⌘ / is pressed. ### Naming Conventions [Swift's official API design guidelines][1] provide an overview to creating idiomatic Swift API. #### Optimize for clarity and expressiveness Choose names that leverage clarity over conciseness. For example, choose `fetchMetadata()` over `fetch()`. Avoid using _get_ as a prefix. For example, in Apple's WeatherKit, Apple [uses][14] `weather(for location: CLLocation)` instead of `getWeather(for location: CLLocation)`. #### Consistency with existing Firebase APIs Consider the precedent set by the existing API that is adjacent to the new API being added. New APIs should be consistent with the existing Firebase API surface, and diverge only when justified. ### Errors If the new API can fail, mark the API as `throws` and create (or add onto) an existing public [error][15] for the API to throw. Swift provides an `Error` protocol that can be used to create descriptive errors that can be easily handled by clients. ### Don't define typedefs _This guideline only applies when changing public Objective-C API_. Don't define typedefs as they hide the underlying type in the corresponding generated Swift API. Instead, use the full type, regardless of how long the Objective-C API signature becomes. [1]: https://www.swift.org/documentation/api-design-guidelines/ [2]: https://google.github.io/swift/ [3]: https://google.github.io/styleguide/objcguide.html [4]: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/swift/improving-objective-c-api-declarations-for-swift [5]: https://docs.swift.org/swift-book/documentation/the-swift-programming-language/concurrency/ [6]: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/swiftui/view/onsubmit(of:_:) [7]: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/swift/sendable [8]: https://nshipster.com/swift-system-version-checking/ [9]: https://nshipster.com/available/ [10]: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/swift/optional [11]: https://github.com/firebase/firebase-ios-sdk/pull/13728 [12]: https://github.com/firebase/firebase-ios-sdk/pull/13976 [13]: https://nshipster.com/swift-documentation/ [14]: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/weatherkit/weatherservice/weather(for:) [15]: https://docs.swift.org/swift-book/documentation/the-swift-programming-language/errorhandling/