An unopinionated and flexible library for easily integrating Tumblr data into your iOS or OS X application. The library uses ARC and requires at least iOS 5 or OS X 10.7.
If you have any feature requests, please let us know by creating an issue or submitting a pull request. Please use the Tumblr API responsibly.
CocoaPods is the recommended way to add the Tumblr
SDK to your project. Using CocoaPods means you don't need to worry about
cloning or adding this repository as a git submodule. CocoaPods is a package
manager like gem
(Ruby) and npm
(Node.js), but for Objective-C projects.
Module authors create "pods" which are versioned and stored in a central repository. App developers create "podfiles" to specify their apps' dependencies and use the CocoaPods command line tool to:
- Fetch the dependencies specified in their podfile
- Recursively fetch all subdependencies
- Create an Xcode workspace that includes the pods, links any necessary libraries, configures header search paths, enables ARC where appropriate, and more
If you're new to CocoaPods, the website contains lots of helpful documentation.
To install the Tumblr SDK you can simply create a podfile in your application's root directory that looks as follows:
platform :ios, '5.0'
pod 'TMTumblrSDK'
After running pod install
, you'll have an Xcode workspace that includes not
only your application but also the Tumblr SDK and its dependencies. That's really
all there is to it.
You will get the latest version of the SDK by referring to it simply by name
(TMTumblrSDK
). This guide
explains how explicit dependency versions can instead be specified.
This SDK is really comprised of numerous "sub-pods." If you'd rather not import everything, feel free to mix and match as you see fit:
TMTumblrSDK/APIClient
TMTumblrSDK/APIClient/Authentication
TMTumblrSDK/AppClient
Each component is described in more detail throughout this README.
If you choose to include TMTumblrSDK (and as such, its dependencies) manually (i.e. without CocoaPods)
please make sure that your app can still read TMTumblrSDK.podspec.json
. We use this for
tracking which versions of TMTumblrSDK are in use, which helps us make informed decisions
about the project’s future.
Appledoc for the SDK can be found here. If you install the Tumblr SDK using CocoaPods, the docset is automatically added to Xcode for you.
There are two ways for your application to connect with Tumblr, each with different benefits. You are free to choose the method that you prefer based on the needs of your application.
The first method is the API Client, a class that facilitates direct communication with Tumblr via the Tumblr API. The benefits of using the API Client include the ability to better control the user experience and keep users in your app. A typical use case for the API client is an application that allows a user to share a photo to multiple social networks at the same time. In this case, after allowing a user to select a photo, you might present them with a list of toggles representing the different networks that would receive the photo. Once they confirm, and assuming they selected Tumblr, you would use the API client to post the image to the user's Tumblr. Use of the API Client requires authentication from the user for certain routes which you may facilitate through the TMTumblrAuthenticator
class.
Please view the API documentation for full usage instructions.
There are two ways of retrieving data from the API:
// `void` methods for immediate requests, preferable when the caller does not need a reference to an actual request object:
[[TMAPIClient sharedInstance] userInfo:^(id result, NSError *error) {
if (!error)
NSLog(@"Got some user info");
}];
// Methods that return configured, signed `JXHTTPOperation` instances and require the client to explicitly send the request separately.
JXHTTPOperation *likesRequest = [[TMAPIClient sharedInstance] likesRequest:@"bryan" parameters:nil];
The API client is built on top of the
JXHTTP networking library. If you're only
interested in the API client, the TMTumblrSDK/APIClient
sub-pod can be
installed by itself.
Import TMAPIClient.h
. Configure the [TMAPIClient sharedInstance]
singleton
with your app’s Tumblr consumer key and secret:
[TMAPIClient sharedInstance].OAuthConsumerKey = @"ADISJdadsoj2dj38dj29dj38jd9238jdk92djasdjASDaoijsd";
[TMAPIClient sharedInstance].OAuthConsumerSecret = @"MGI39kdasdoka3240989ASFjoiajsfomdasd39129ASDAPDOJa";
If you don't already have a consumer key/secret you can register here.
The authentication methods detailed below will provide the API client with a token and token secret. The SDK does not currently persist these values; you are responsible for storing them and setting them on the API client on subsequent app launches, before making any API requests. This may change in a future release.
In your app’s Info.plist
, specify a custom URL scheme that the browser can
use to return to your application once the user has permitted or denied
access to Tumblr:
<key>CFBundleURLTypes</key>
<array>
<dict>
<key>CFBundleURLSchemes</key>
<array>
<string>myapp</string>
</array>
</dict>
</array>
In your app delegate, allow the TMAPIClient
singleton to handle incoming URL requests.
On iOS this looks like:
- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application openURL:(NSURL *)url
sourceApplication:(NSString *)sourceApplication annotation:(id)annotation {
return [[TMAPIClient sharedInstance] handleOpenURL:url];
}
OS X:
- (void)applicationWillFinishLaunching:(NSNotification *)notification {
NSAppleEventManager *appleEventManager = [NSAppleEventManager sharedAppleEventManager];
[appleEventManager setEventHandler:self andSelector:@selector(handleURLEvent:withReplyEvent:)
forEventClass:kInternetEventClass andEventID:kAEGetURL];
}
- (void)handleURLEvent:(NSAppleEventDescriptor*)event withReplyEvent:(NSAppleEventDescriptor*)replyEvent {
NSString *calledURL = [[event paramDescriptorForKeyword:keyDirectObject] stringValue];
[[TMAPIClient sharedInstance] handleOpenURL:[NSURL URLWithString:calledURL]];
}
Initiate the three-legged OAuth flow, by specifying the URL scheme that your app will respond to.
iOS:
[[TMAPIClient sharedInstance] authenticate:@"myapp" fromViewController:controller
callback:^(NSError *error) {
// You are now authenticated (if !error)
}];
OS X:
[[TMAPIClient sharedInstance] authenticate:@"myapp" callback:^(NSError *error) {
// You are now authenticated (if !error)
}];
Please note that xAuth access is no longer available to 3rd party developers.
If you're only interested in authentication, the
TMTumblrSDK/APIClient/Authentication
sub-pod can be installed by itself.
The second method is the App Client, a class that allows you to facilate communication to Tumblr via the Tumblr App installed on the phone. The App Client provides a series of methods, each of which will launch the Tumblr App, passing the necessary parameters to perform a specific function. When launching the Tumblr app to make a post, the Tumblr App will return the user to your app if you include the correct success and cancel parameters. The benefit of the App Client is that it requires very little programming on your part and does not require any user authentication (they are already authenticated in the Tumblr App). In addition, it always uses the latest functionality in the Tumblr app to perform the desired function so you don't have to keep your app up to date. You might use the App Client when you want to enable a user to post an image to Tumblr using the post form in the Tumblr App, thus allowing them to edit the image using Tumblr's tools.
The TMTumblrAppClient
class provides a simple interface for interacting with
Tumblr for iOS if the
user has it installed. The following methods are currently available. See the AppleDoc for details of each.
+ isTumblrInstalled
+ viewInAppStore
+ viewDashboard
+ viewExplore
+ viewActivityForPrimaryBlog
+ viewActivity:
+ viewTag:
+ viewPrimaryBlog
+ viewBlog:
+ viewPost:blogName:
+ createTextPost:body:tags:
+ createTextPost:body:tags:success:cancel:
+ createQuotePost:source:tags:
+ createQuotePost:source:tags:success:cancel:
+ createLinkPost:URLString:description:tags:
+ createLinkPost:URLString:description:tags:success:cancel:
+ createChatPost:body:tags:
+ createChatPost:body:tags:success:cancel:
+ showAuthorizeWithToken:
The showAuthorizeWithToken:
example allows you to kick off the OAuth
authorization step after obtaining a request token
(see Authentication section in the
docs). Make sure your redirect URLs are properly set in the API dashboard to
handle callbacks from this flow.
If you're only interested in the app client,
the TMTumblrSDK/AppClient
sub-pod can be installed by itself.
If your app posts to Tumblr, you can provide the API Client with deep link URLs under the keys TMPostKeyDeepLinkiOS
and TMPostKeyDeepLinkAndroid
. This will cause attribution UI for your app to be displayed beneath the post on the respective platform. When this UI is tapped, the OS will open the deep link you specified. Be aware that all icons and required fields must be provided in your app's configuration before this UI will be visible.
NOTE: This is currently only available to whitelisted app partners. Contact Tumblr business development ([email protected]) if your app requires this functionality.
URL schemes [Deprecated] - Developers who use the URL schemes should migrate to the App Client
Apps that already make direct calls to Tumblr URL schemes will still work. Going forward, for App to App communications, use the App client.
The repository includes a sample application which shows all of the inter-app hooks in action.
Copyright 2012 Tumblr, Inc.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the “License”); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an “AS IS” BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.