Timer.scheduledTimer Swift 3 pre-iOS 10 compatibility

58,167

Solution 1

Solved using

Timer.scheduledTimer(timeInterval: 1,
                           target: self,
                         selector: #selector(self.updateTime),
                         userInfo: nil,
                          repeats: true)

Solution 2

Run a timer with swift3,

var timer: Timer?

func startTimer() {

    if timer == nil {
        timer = Timer.scheduledTimer(timeInterval: 3, target: self, selector: #selector(self.loop), userInfo: nil, repeats: true)
    }
}

func stopTimer() {
    if timer != nil {
        timer?.invalidate()
        timer = nil
    }
}

func loop() {
    let liveInfoUrl = URL(string: "http://192.168.1.66/api/cloud/app/liveInfo/7777")
    let task = URLSession.shared.dataTask(with: liveInfoUrl! as URL) {data, response, error in
        guard let data = data, error == nil else { return }
        print(String(data: data, encoding: String.Encoding(rawValue: String.Encoding.utf8.rawValue)) ?? "aaaa")
    }
    task.resume()
}

Release the timer when you not use it.

Once scheduled on a run loop, the timer fires at the specified interval until it is invalidated. A nonrepeating timer invalidates itself immediately after it fires. However, for a repeating timer, you must invalidate the timer object yourself by calling its invalidate() method.

Solution 3

Here is sample code workable with compatibility:

if #available(iOS 10.0, *) {
    Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: 15.0, repeats: true){_ in
        // Your code is here:
        self.myMethod()
    }
} else {      
    Timer.scheduledTimer(timeInterval: 15.0, target: self, selector: #selector(self.myMethod), userInfo: nil, repeats: true)
}

//Your method or function:

// MARK: -  Method

@objc func myMethod() {
    print("Hi, How are you.")
}

Solution 4

Swift 3

func runCode(in timeInterval:TimeInterval, _ code:@escaping ()->(Void))
{
    DispatchQueue.main.asyncAfter(
        deadline: .now() + timeInterval,
        execute: code)
}

func runCode(at date:Date, _ code:@escaping ()->(Void))
{
    let timeInterval = date.timeIntervalSinceNow
    runCode(in: timeInterval, code)
}

func test()
{
    runCode(at: Date(timeIntervalSinceNow:2))
    {
        print("Hello")
    }

    runCode(in: 3.0)
    {
        print("World)")
    }
}

Solution 5

Updated for swift 3:

If you want to use Timer for some delay or any other purpose used below lines of code in your project;

// function defination:

func usedTimerForDelay()  {
    Timer.scheduledTimer(timeInterval: 0.3,
                         target: self,
                         selector: #selector(self.run(_:)),
                         userInfo: nil, 
                         repeats: false)
}

func run(_ timer: AnyObject) {
      print("Do your remaining stuff here...")

}

// function call:

self.usedTimerForDelay()

NOTE:- you can change the time interval as you want.

//Enjoy coding..!

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58,167
rockdaswift
Author by

rockdaswift

Rocking some Swift

Updated on June 03, 2020

Comments

  • rockdaswift
    rockdaswift almost 4 years

    I need to schedule a Timer for firing a function every second but I see that in Xcode 8 beta 3 the scheduledTimer is only available for iOS 10.

    Is there any alternative for using the timer in iOS 9 or previous versions?

    Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: 1, repeats: true, block: { (timer) in print("Hi!")})