How to add iOS native libraries and use it on nativescript?












0














I'm trying to add an iOS native library, Jumio, to my nativescript project. I follow nativescript document instruction. as it said, I did these steps:



1- Create cli project:



tns create MYCocoaPodsApp
cd MYCocoaPodsApp
tns platform add ios


2- Wrap the Library as NativeScript Plugin



cd ..
mkdir my-plugin
cd my-plugin


3- Create a package.json inside of my-plugin with the following content



{
"name": "my-plugin",
"version": "0.0.1",
"nativescript": {
"platforms": {
"ios": "1.3.0"
}
}
}


4- Create a Podfile inside of my-plugin/platforms/ios/Podfile file with following content (I copied it from the native library document):



source 'https://github.com/CocoaPods/Specs.git'

use_frameworks! # Required for proper framework handling

pod 'JumioMobileSDK', '~>2.13' # If you use BAM Checkout along Netverify in your app. Frameworks supporting device architectures only.

pod 'JumioMobileSDK/Netverify', '~>2.13' # Specify Netverify as subspec to only use Netverify, Fastfill or Document Verification
pod 'JumioMobileSDK/BAMCheckout', '~>2.13' # Specify BAMCheckout as subspec to only use BAM Checkout


It looks like this



my-plugin/
├── package.json
└── platforms/
└── ios/
└── Podfile


5- Install and Build project



tns plugin add ../my-plugin
tns build ios


It will install and build successfully but I don't know how should I use it in my project.



Any Idea?










share|improve this question






















  • Do you want to publish it or just use it within your project?
    – Manoj
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:17










  • From that point on you need to covert the Obj-C code to JavaScript (or TypeScript depending what you prefer to work with) by following the marshalling techniques in NativeScript and the specific conversion syntax docs.nativescript.org/angular/core-concepts/ios-runtime/…
    – Nick Iliev
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:24










  • E.g. the Obj-c code BAMCheckoutConfiguration *config = [BAMCheckoutConfiguration new]; should become let confit = BAMCheckoutConfiguration.new() or let confit = new BAMCheckoutConfiguration() I think both syntax are valid in this case
    – Nick Iliev
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:28
















0














I'm trying to add an iOS native library, Jumio, to my nativescript project. I follow nativescript document instruction. as it said, I did these steps:



1- Create cli project:



tns create MYCocoaPodsApp
cd MYCocoaPodsApp
tns platform add ios


2- Wrap the Library as NativeScript Plugin



cd ..
mkdir my-plugin
cd my-plugin


3- Create a package.json inside of my-plugin with the following content



{
"name": "my-plugin",
"version": "0.0.1",
"nativescript": {
"platforms": {
"ios": "1.3.0"
}
}
}


4- Create a Podfile inside of my-plugin/platforms/ios/Podfile file with following content (I copied it from the native library document):



source 'https://github.com/CocoaPods/Specs.git'

use_frameworks! # Required for proper framework handling

pod 'JumioMobileSDK', '~>2.13' # If you use BAM Checkout along Netverify in your app. Frameworks supporting device architectures only.

pod 'JumioMobileSDK/Netverify', '~>2.13' # Specify Netverify as subspec to only use Netverify, Fastfill or Document Verification
pod 'JumioMobileSDK/BAMCheckout', '~>2.13' # Specify BAMCheckout as subspec to only use BAM Checkout


It looks like this



my-plugin/
├── package.json
└── platforms/
└── ios/
└── Podfile


5- Install and Build project



tns plugin add ../my-plugin
tns build ios


It will install and build successfully but I don't know how should I use it in my project.



Any Idea?










share|improve this question






















  • Do you want to publish it or just use it within your project?
    – Manoj
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:17










  • From that point on you need to covert the Obj-C code to JavaScript (or TypeScript depending what you prefer to work with) by following the marshalling techniques in NativeScript and the specific conversion syntax docs.nativescript.org/angular/core-concepts/ios-runtime/…
    – Nick Iliev
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:24










  • E.g. the Obj-c code BAMCheckoutConfiguration *config = [BAMCheckoutConfiguration new]; should become let confit = BAMCheckoutConfiguration.new() or let confit = new BAMCheckoutConfiguration() I think both syntax are valid in this case
    – Nick Iliev
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:28














0












0








0







I'm trying to add an iOS native library, Jumio, to my nativescript project. I follow nativescript document instruction. as it said, I did these steps:



1- Create cli project:



tns create MYCocoaPodsApp
cd MYCocoaPodsApp
tns platform add ios


2- Wrap the Library as NativeScript Plugin



cd ..
mkdir my-plugin
cd my-plugin


3- Create a package.json inside of my-plugin with the following content



{
"name": "my-plugin",
"version": "0.0.1",
"nativescript": {
"platforms": {
"ios": "1.3.0"
}
}
}


4- Create a Podfile inside of my-plugin/platforms/ios/Podfile file with following content (I copied it from the native library document):



source 'https://github.com/CocoaPods/Specs.git'

use_frameworks! # Required for proper framework handling

pod 'JumioMobileSDK', '~>2.13' # If you use BAM Checkout along Netverify in your app. Frameworks supporting device architectures only.

pod 'JumioMobileSDK/Netverify', '~>2.13' # Specify Netverify as subspec to only use Netverify, Fastfill or Document Verification
pod 'JumioMobileSDK/BAMCheckout', '~>2.13' # Specify BAMCheckout as subspec to only use BAM Checkout


It looks like this



my-plugin/
├── package.json
└── platforms/
└── ios/
└── Podfile


5- Install and Build project



tns plugin add ../my-plugin
tns build ios


It will install and build successfully but I don't know how should I use it in my project.



Any Idea?










share|improve this question













I'm trying to add an iOS native library, Jumio, to my nativescript project. I follow nativescript document instruction. as it said, I did these steps:



1- Create cli project:



tns create MYCocoaPodsApp
cd MYCocoaPodsApp
tns platform add ios


2- Wrap the Library as NativeScript Plugin



cd ..
mkdir my-plugin
cd my-plugin


3- Create a package.json inside of my-plugin with the following content



{
"name": "my-plugin",
"version": "0.0.1",
"nativescript": {
"platforms": {
"ios": "1.3.0"
}
}
}


4- Create a Podfile inside of my-plugin/platforms/ios/Podfile file with following content (I copied it from the native library document):



source 'https://github.com/CocoaPods/Specs.git'

use_frameworks! # Required for proper framework handling

pod 'JumioMobileSDK', '~>2.13' # If you use BAM Checkout along Netverify in your app. Frameworks supporting device architectures only.

pod 'JumioMobileSDK/Netverify', '~>2.13' # Specify Netverify as subspec to only use Netverify, Fastfill or Document Verification
pod 'JumioMobileSDK/BAMCheckout', '~>2.13' # Specify BAMCheckout as subspec to only use BAM Checkout


It looks like this



my-plugin/
├── package.json
└── platforms/
└── ios/
└── Podfile


5- Install and Build project



tns plugin add ../my-plugin
tns build ios


It will install and build successfully but I don't know how should I use it in my project.



Any Idea?







nativescript






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 20 '18 at 9:46









Meysam Mahmoodi

11111




11111












  • Do you want to publish it or just use it within your project?
    – Manoj
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:17










  • From that point on you need to covert the Obj-C code to JavaScript (or TypeScript depending what you prefer to work with) by following the marshalling techniques in NativeScript and the specific conversion syntax docs.nativescript.org/angular/core-concepts/ios-runtime/…
    – Nick Iliev
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:24










  • E.g. the Obj-c code BAMCheckoutConfiguration *config = [BAMCheckoutConfiguration new]; should become let confit = BAMCheckoutConfiguration.new() or let confit = new BAMCheckoutConfiguration() I think both syntax are valid in this case
    – Nick Iliev
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:28


















  • Do you want to publish it or just use it within your project?
    – Manoj
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:17










  • From that point on you need to covert the Obj-C code to JavaScript (or TypeScript depending what you prefer to work with) by following the marshalling techniques in NativeScript and the specific conversion syntax docs.nativescript.org/angular/core-concepts/ios-runtime/…
    – Nick Iliev
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:24










  • E.g. the Obj-c code BAMCheckoutConfiguration *config = [BAMCheckoutConfiguration new]; should become let confit = BAMCheckoutConfiguration.new() or let confit = new BAMCheckoutConfiguration() I think both syntax are valid in this case
    – Nick Iliev
    Nov 20 '18 at 13:28
















Do you want to publish it or just use it within your project?
– Manoj
Nov 20 '18 at 13:17




Do you want to publish it or just use it within your project?
– Manoj
Nov 20 '18 at 13:17












From that point on you need to covert the Obj-C code to JavaScript (or TypeScript depending what you prefer to work with) by following the marshalling techniques in NativeScript and the specific conversion syntax docs.nativescript.org/angular/core-concepts/ios-runtime/…
– Nick Iliev
Nov 20 '18 at 13:24




From that point on you need to covert the Obj-C code to JavaScript (or TypeScript depending what you prefer to work with) by following the marshalling techniques in NativeScript and the specific conversion syntax docs.nativescript.org/angular/core-concepts/ios-runtime/…
– Nick Iliev
Nov 20 '18 at 13:24












E.g. the Obj-c code BAMCheckoutConfiguration *config = [BAMCheckoutConfiguration new]; should become let confit = BAMCheckoutConfiguration.new() or let confit = new BAMCheckoutConfiguration() I think both syntax are valid in this case
– Nick Iliev
Nov 20 '18 at 13:28




E.g. the Obj-c code BAMCheckoutConfiguration *config = [BAMCheckoutConfiguration new]; should become let confit = BAMCheckoutConfiguration.new() or let confit = new BAMCheckoutConfiguration() I think both syntax are valid in this case
– Nick Iliev
Nov 20 '18 at 13:28












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