Mappedin SDK for iOS helps you deliver the rich indoor mapping experience of your venue, designed in Mappedin CMS, inside your iOS apps.
In this overview, we will go through the basic concepts that will help you understand how the SDK works. In further sections, we'll also go through the setup and usage of the Mappedin SDK for iOS.
The iOS SDK is simply a native interface to the Web SDK. The SDK is a framework built using Swift, and it automatically handles any authentication, network communication, fetching of map data, its display, and basic user interaction, such as panning, tapping, and zooming. The SDK allows you to build your own interactions. You can render your own additional layers on top of the map that the SDK renders.
Mappedin iOS SDK is supported on iOS versions 14.0 and above
Concepts
- After the quick initial setup and configuration, the SDK renders the maps associated with the keys provided by you, inside an MPIMapView instance you created.
- The SDK allows you to render your venue's maps in 3D. The SDK pulls the most up-to-date data from our mapping CMS for all your points of interest within your venue.
- The SDK supports drawing navigation paths and providing instructions to and from any point of interest within the venue. Both accessible and non-accessible optimized routes are supported. You can build more functionality on top of this experience, such as searching or switching venues.
Further pieces of this guide give you more details about how to set up the SDK and customize it as per your liking.
Quickstart
This quickstart guide is written for a new Storyboard application that has been initialized with Cocoapods.
Add dependency to CocoaPods
Mappedin's SDK is available through CocoaPods. You can find the latest version on Github. To install it, add the dependency to your Podfile in your project's root directory:
pod 'MappedIn', '5.1.9'
For more information on how to use Cocoapods, see here.
In order for your project to recognize the Pods framework, you must be working from the .xcworkspace
file rather than the individual .xcproj
file. If you started a new project from scratch in Xcode, you'll need to close it and open the workspace.
Make sure platform :ios, '11.0'
is set to version 11.0 at minimum.
Your Podfile
should now have at least the following information with your own app name replacing mappedin-ios-sdk-app
:
platform :ios, '11.0'
target 'mappedin-ios-sdk-app' do use_frameworks!
pod 'MappedIn', '5.0.3'end
In the terminal, run pod install
in your project's root directory.
To import the module into the project, add the following line to your ViewController
:
import Mappedin
Refer to our Github repository to view the sample app created by Mappedin developers to understand how to embed a map into your app.
Display the Venue
Creating the MPIMapView instance
Now we are ready to initialize an MPIMapView instance mapView
in the viewDidLoad()
method of your ViewController
and add it to the layout:
var mapView: MPIMapView?
override func viewDidLoad() { super.viewDidLoad()
// Set up MPIMapView and add to view mapView = MPIMapView(frame: view.frame) if let mapView = mapView { self.view.addSubview(mapView) }}
Load the Venue
loadVenue
is a MPIMapView
function that allows you to render the venue in your app by passing in an options
object and an optional showVenueOptions
object.
The required properties of options
object are venue
, clientId
, clientSecret
. To get you started, we’ve provided a Mappedin id and secret that has access to some demo venues. When you’re ready to start using your own venues with the SDK, you will need to contact a Mappedin representative to get your own unique id and secret.
You can also pass in MPIOptions.ShowVenue to modify the properties of the map such as the background color, the map that is displayed first and whether all locations are labeled on initialization. Add the following mapView.loadVenue
call inside the optional unwrapping of mapView
.
mapView.loadVenue(options: MPIOptions.Init( clientId: "5eab30aa91b055001a68e996", clientSecret: "RJyRXKcryCMy4erZqqCbuB1NbR66QTGNXVE0x3Pg6oCIlUR1", venue: "mappedin-demo-mall"), showVenueOptions: MPIOptions.ShowVenue( labelAllLocationsOnInit: true, backgroundColor: "#ffffff"))
To display the data in an alternative language present in the Mappedin system, you can request the data with custom headers:
MPIOptions.Init( clientId: "5eab30aa91b055001a68e996", clientSecret: "RJyRXKcryCMy4erZqqCbuB1NbR66QTGNXVE0x3Pg6oCIlUR1", venue: "mappedin-demo-mall", headers: [MPIHeader(name: "Accept-Language", value: "en")] )
Showing cached venue data
showVenue
is an alternative method to load the venue without using any API calls to retrieve the data. Instead, the data must be passed into the showVenue
method which takes in a data string (which can be retrieved from a file).
Use this sample JSON file to get started with the
showVenue
method.
Here is an example:
// use showVenue to load venueif let path = Bundle.main.path(forResource: "mappedin-demo-mall", ofType: "json") { venueDataString = try? String(contentsOfFile: path) if let venueDataString = venueDataString { mapView.showVenue( venueResponse: venueDataString, showVenueOptions: MPIOptions.ShowVenue(labelAllLocationsOnInit: true, backgroundColor: "#CDCDCD") ) }}
Result
import UIKitimport Mappedin
class ViewController: UIViewController {
var mapView: MPIMapView?
override func viewDidLoad() { super.viewDidLoad()
mapView = MPIMapView(frame: view.frame) if let mapView = mapView { self.view.addSubview(mapView)
mapView.loadVenue(options: MPIOptions.Init( clientId: "5eab30aa91b055001a68e996", clientSecret: "RJyRXKcryCMy4erZqqCbuB1NbR66QTGNXVE0x3Pg6oCIlUR1", venue: "mappedin-demo-mall"), showVenueOptions: MPIOptions.ShowVenue( labelAllLocationsOnInit: true, backgroundColor: "#ffffff" )) } }}
You should see something that looks like this: