I wrote an app known as SwiftUI View Lifecycle. The app means that you can observe how completely different SwiftUI constructs and containers have an effect on a view’s lifecycle, together with the lifetime of its state and when onAppear will get known as. The code for the app is on GitHub. It may be constructed for iOS and macOS.
Once we write SwiftUI code, we assemble a view tree that consists of nested view values. Situations of the view tree are ephemeral: SwiftUI always destroys and recreates (components of) the view tree because it processes state adjustments.
The view tree serves as a blueprint from which SwiftUI creates a second tree, which represents the precise view “objects” which are “on display screen” at any given time. (The “objects” could possibly be precise UIView or NSView objects, but additionally different representations. The precise which means of “on display screen” can differ relying on context.) Chris Eidhof likes to name this second tree the render tree (the hyperlink factors to a 3 minute video the place Chris demonstrates this duality, extremely really helpful).
The render tree persists throughout state adjustments and is utilized by SwiftUI to determine view identification. When a state change causes a change in a view’s worth, SwiftUI will discover the corresponding view object within the render tree and replace it in place, fairly than recreating a brand new view object from scratch. That is after all key to creating SwiftUI environment friendly, however the render tree has one other essential perform: it controls the lifetimes of views and their state.
We are able to outline a view’s lifetime because the timespan it exists within the render tree. The lifetime begins with the insertion into the render tree and ends with the elimination. Importantly, the lifetime extends to view state outlined with @State and @StateObject: when a view will get faraway from the render tree, its state is misplaced; when the view will get inserted once more later, the state can be recreated with its preliminary worth.
The SwiftUI View Lifecycle app tracks three lifecycle occasions for a view and shows them as timestamps:
- @State = when the view’s state was created (equal to the beginning of the view’s lifetime)
- onAppear = when
onAppearwas final known as - onDisappear = when
onDisappearwas final known as
The app means that you can observe these occasions in numerous contexts. As you click on your approach by the assorted examples, you’ll discover that the timing of those occasions adjustments relying on the context a view is embedded in. For instance:
- An
if/elseassertion creates and destroys its little one views each time the situation adjustments; state shouldn’t be preserved. - A
ScrollVieweagerly inserts all of its kids into the render tree, no matter whether or not they’re contained in the viewport or not. All kids seem instantly and by no means disappear. - A
Checklistwith dynamic content material (utilizingForEach) lazily inserts solely the kid views which are at the moment seen. However as soon as a baby view’s lifetime has began, the record will maintain its state alive even when it will get scrolled offscreen once more.onAppearandonDisappearget known as repeatedly as views are scroll into and out of the viewport. - A NavigationStack calls
onAppearandonDisappearas views are pushed and popped. State for mother or father ranges within the stack is preserved when a baby view is pushed. - A
TabViewbegins the lifetime of all little one views instantly, even the non-visible tabs.onAppearandonDisappearget known as repeatedly because the person switches tabs, however the tab view retains the state alive for all tabs.
Listed here are just a few classes to remove from this:
- Totally different container views might have completely different efficiency and reminiscence utilization behaviors, relying on how lengthy they maintain little one views alive.
onAppearisn’t essentially known as when the state is created. It could possibly occur later (however by no means earlier).onAppearwill be known as a number of instances in some container views. Should you want a aspect impact to occur precisely as soon as in a view’s lifetime, contemplate writing your self aonFirstAppearhelper, as proven by Ian Eager and Jordan Morgan in Operating Code Solely As soon as in SwiftUI (2022-11-01).
I’m positive you’ll discover extra fascinating tidbits once you play with the app. Suggestions is welcome!

