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UILexicon in Objective-C

How do you use UILexicon in Objective-C? I find the documentation Apple provides is extremely unhelpful.

What does it do? Does it return a dictionary or proper spellings of words? Or do I provide a word like "hellllo" and it matches it with the proper spelling "Hello" and returns that as a string?

Any help would be appreciated.

requestSupplementaryLexiconWithCompletion:


Here's my error report, but obviously I'll have errors because I'm completely guessing how to use the function, no clue what goes inside the block statement (because the docs (at the time) don't say! (Beta 4 docs)) Hahahah! enter image description here

like image 983
Albert Renshaw Avatar asked Dec 08 '22 07:12

Albert Renshaw


1 Answers

I've never used this feature, but a quick web search for "UILexicon" landed me in Apple's documentation; reading and following links from there filled in the picture pretty quick.

App Extension Programming Guide has a quick explanation of what lexicons are for:

Every custom keyboard (independent of the value of its RequestsOpenAccess key) has access to a basic autocorrection lexicon through the UILexicon class. Make use of this class, along with a lexicon of your own design, to provide suggestions and autocorrections as users are entering text.

Clicking the UILexicon link on that page took me to the reference doc for that class, which explains that it's a read-only list of Apple-provided term pairs. Each of its entries is a UILexiconEntry object -- the docs for that class say it provides a userInput (what the user typed, e.g. "ipad") and a documentText (what to substitute for it, e.g. "iPad"). Since those classes are read-only, it follows that they're probably not a way for you to provide your own autocorrection pairs -- as stated in the docs, they're for supplementing whatever autocorrection system you implement.


At this point, I don't even have to look at the doc for requestSupplementaryLexiconWithCompletion: to get a good idea how to use it: just the declaration tells me:

  • It's a method on UIInputViewController, the class I'd have to subclass to create a custom keyboard. Somewhere in that subclass I should probably call it on self.
  • Its return type is void, so I can't get a lexicon by assigning the result of a requestSupplementaryLexiconWithCompletion call to to a variable.
  • It calls the block I provide, passing me a UILexicon object as a parameter to that block.
  • It's got words like "request" and "completionHander" in it, so it'll probably do something asynchronous that takes awhile, and call that block when it's done.

So, I'm guessing that if I were writing a custom keyboard, I'd call this method early on (in viewDidLoad, perhaps) and stash the UILexicon it provides so I can refer to it later when the user is typing. Something like this:

@property UILexicon *lexicon;

- (void)viewDidLoad {
    [super viewDidLoad];
    [self requestSupplementaryLexiconWithCompletion:^(UILexicon *lexicon){
        self.lexicon = lexicon;
    }];
}

Because it's unclear how long requestSupplementaryLexiconWithCompletion will take to complete, any place where I'm using self.lexicon I should check to see if it's nil.


Back in the App Extension Programming Guide, it lists "Autocorrection and suggestion" under "Keyboard Features That iOS Users Expect", right before saying:

You can decide whether or not to implement such features; there is no dedicated API for any of the features just listed

So it sounds like autocorrection is something you have to do yourself, with your own UI that's part of the view presented by your UIInputViewController subclass. The API Quick Start for Custom Keyboards section in the programming guide seems to hint at how you'd do that: use documentContextBeforeInput to see what the user has recently typed, deleteBackward to get rid of it, and insertText: to insert a correction.

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rickster Avatar answered Dec 11 '22 09:12

rickster