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Most of the stdlib's properties don't need @_borrowed because they're @inlinable, but I did find one place in an overlay where it's probably sensible to make the operation use generalized accessors even if they're resilient.
278 lines
10 KiB
Swift
278 lines
10 KiB
Swift
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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//
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// This source file is part of the Swift.org open source project
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//
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// Copyright (c) 2014 - 2017 Apple Inc. and the Swift project authors
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// Licensed under Apache License v2.0 with Runtime Library Exception
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//
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// See https://swift.org/LICENSE.txt for license information
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// See https://swift.org/CONTRIBUTORS.txt for the list of Swift project authors
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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/// A collection that supports subscript assignment.
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///
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/// Collections that conform to `MutableCollection` gain the ability to
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/// change the value of their elements. This example shows how you can
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/// modify one of the names in an array of students.
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///
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/// var students = ["Ben", "Ivy", "Jordell", "Maxime"]
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/// if let i = students.firstIndex(of: "Maxime") {
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/// students[i] = "Max"
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/// }
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/// print(students)
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/// // Prints "["Ben", "Ivy", "Jordell", "Max"]"
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///
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/// In addition to changing the value of an individual element, you can also
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/// change the values of a slice of elements in a mutable collection. For
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/// example, you can sort *part* of a mutable collection by calling the
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/// mutable `sort()` method on a subscripted subsequence. Here's an
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/// example that sorts the first half of an array of integers:
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///
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/// var numbers = [15, 40, 10, 30, 60, 25, 5, 100]
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/// numbers[0..<4].sort()
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/// print(numbers)
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/// // Prints "[10, 15, 30, 40, 60, 25, 5, 100]"
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///
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/// The `MutableCollection` protocol allows changing the values of a
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/// collection's elements but not the length of the collection itself. For
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/// operations that require adding or removing elements, see the
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/// `RangeReplaceableCollection` protocol instead.
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///
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/// Conforming to the MutableCollection Protocol
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/// ============================================
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///
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/// To add conformance to the `MutableCollection` protocol to your own
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/// custom collection, upgrade your type's subscript to support both read
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/// and write access.
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///
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/// A value stored into a subscript of a `MutableCollection` instance must
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/// subsequently be accessible at that same position. That is, for a mutable
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/// collection instance `a`, index `i`, and value `x`, the two sets of
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/// assignments in the following code sample must be equivalent:
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///
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/// a[i] = x
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/// let y = a[i]
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///
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/// // Must be equivalent to:
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/// a[i] = x
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/// let y = x
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public protocol MutableCollection: Collection
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where SubSequence: MutableCollection
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{
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// FIXME: Associated type inference requires these.
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override associatedtype Element
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override associatedtype Index
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override associatedtype SubSequence
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/// Accesses the element at the specified position.
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///
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/// For example, you can replace an element of an array by using its
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/// subscript.
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///
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/// var streets = ["Adams", "Bryant", "Channing", "Douglas", "Evarts"]
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/// streets[1] = "Butler"
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/// print(streets[1])
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/// // Prints "Butler"
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///
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/// You can subscript a collection with any valid index other than the
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/// collection's end index. The end index refers to the position one
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/// past the last element of a collection, so it doesn't correspond with an
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/// element.
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///
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/// - Parameter position: The position of the element to access. `position`
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/// must be a valid index of the collection that is not equal to the
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/// `endIndex` property.
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///
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/// - Complexity: O(1)
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@_borrowed
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override subscript(position: Index) -> Element { get set }
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/// Accesses a contiguous subrange of the collection's elements.
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///
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/// The accessed slice uses the same indices for the same elements as the
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/// original collection. Always use the slice's `startIndex` property
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/// instead of assuming that its indices start at a particular value.
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///
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/// This example demonstrates getting a slice of an array of strings, finding
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/// the index of one of the strings in the slice, and then using that index
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/// in the original array.
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///
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/// let streets = ["Adams", "Bryant", "Channing", "Douglas", "Evarts"]
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/// let streetsSlice = streets[2 ..< streets.endIndex]
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/// print(streetsSlice)
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/// // Prints "["Channing", "Douglas", "Evarts"]"
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///
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/// let index = streetsSlice.firstIndex(of: "Evarts") // 4
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/// streets[index!] = "Eustace"
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/// print(streets[index!])
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/// // Prints "Eustace"
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///
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/// - Parameter bounds: A range of the collection's indices. The bounds of
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/// the range must be valid indices of the collection.
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///
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/// - Complexity: O(1)
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override subscript(bounds: Range<Index>) -> SubSequence { get set }
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/// Reorders the elements of the collection such that all the elements
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/// that match the given predicate are after all the elements that don't
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/// match.
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///
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/// After partitioning a collection, there is a pivot index `p` where
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/// no element before `p` satisfies the `belongsInSecondPartition`
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/// predicate and every element at or after `p` satisfies
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/// `belongsInSecondPartition`.
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///
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/// In the following example, an array of numbers is partitioned by a
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/// predicate that matches elements greater than 30.
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///
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/// var numbers = [30, 40, 20, 30, 30, 60, 10]
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/// let p = numbers.partition(by: { $0 > 30 })
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/// // p == 5
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/// // numbers == [30, 10, 20, 30, 30, 60, 40]
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///
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/// The `numbers` array is now arranged in two partitions. The first
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/// partition, `numbers[..<p]`, is made up of the elements that
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/// are not greater than 30. The second partition, `numbers[p...]`,
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/// is made up of the elements that *are* greater than 30.
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///
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/// let first = numbers[..<p]
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/// // first == [30, 10, 20, 30, 30]
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/// let second = numbers[p...]
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/// // second == [60, 40]
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///
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/// - Parameter belongsInSecondPartition: A predicate used to partition
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/// the collection. All elements satisfying this predicate are ordered
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/// after all elements not satisfying it.
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/// - Returns: The index of the first element in the reordered collection
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/// that matches `belongsInSecondPartition`. If no elements in the
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/// collection match `belongsInSecondPartition`, the returned index is
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/// equal to the collection's `endIndex`.
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///
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/// - Complexity: O(*n*), where *n* is the length of the collection.
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mutating func partition(
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by belongsInSecondPartition: (Element) throws -> Bool
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) rethrows -> Index
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/// Exchanges the values at the specified indices of the collection.
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///
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/// Both parameters must be valid indices of the collection and not
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/// equal to `endIndex`. Passing the same index as both `i` and `j` has no
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/// effect.
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///
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/// - Parameters:
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/// - i: The index of the first value to swap.
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/// - j: The index of the second value to swap.
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///
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/// - Complexity: O(1)
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mutating func swapAt(_ i: Index, _ j: Index)
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/// Call `body(p)`, where `p` is a pointer to the collection's
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/// mutable contiguous storage. If no such storage exists, it is
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/// first created. If the collection does not support an internal
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/// representation in a form of mutable contiguous storage, `body` is not
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/// called and `nil` is returned.
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///
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/// Often, the optimizer can eliminate bounds- and uniqueness-checks
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/// within an algorithm, but when that fails, invoking the
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/// same algorithm on `body`\ 's argument lets you trade safety for
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/// speed.
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mutating func _withUnsafeMutableBufferPointerIfSupported<R>(
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_ body: (inout UnsafeMutableBufferPointer<Element>) throws -> R
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) rethrows -> R?
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}
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// TODO: swift-3-indexing-model - review the following
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extension MutableCollection {
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@inlinable
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public mutating func _withUnsafeMutableBufferPointerIfSupported<R>(
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_ body: (inout UnsafeMutableBufferPointer<Element>) throws -> R
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) rethrows -> R? {
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return nil
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}
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/// Accesses a contiguous subrange of the collection's elements.
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///
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/// The accessed slice uses the same indices for the same elements as the
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/// original collection. Always use the slice's `startIndex` property
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/// instead of assuming that its indices start at a particular value.
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///
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/// This example demonstrates getting a slice of an array of strings, finding
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/// the index of one of the strings in the slice, and then using that index
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/// in the original array.
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///
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/// let streets = ["Adams", "Bryant", "Channing", "Douglas", "Evarts"]
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/// let streetsSlice = streets[2 ..< streets.endIndex]
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/// print(streetsSlice)
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/// // Prints "["Channing", "Douglas", "Evarts"]"
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///
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/// let index = streetsSlice.firstIndex(of: "Evarts") // 4
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/// streets[index!] = "Eustace"
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/// print(streets[index!])
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/// // Prints "Eustace"
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///
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/// - Parameter bounds: A range of the collection's indices. The bounds of
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/// the range must be valid indices of the collection.
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///
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/// - Complexity: O(1)
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@inlinable
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public subscript(bounds: Range<Index>) -> Slice<Self> {
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get {
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_failEarlyRangeCheck(bounds, bounds: startIndex..<endIndex)
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return Slice(base: self, bounds: bounds)
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}
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set {
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_writeBackMutableSlice(&self, bounds: bounds, slice: newValue)
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}
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}
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/// Exchanges the values at the specified indices of the collection.
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///
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/// Both parameters must be valid indices of the collection that are not
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/// equal to `endIndex`. Calling `swapAt(_:_:)` with the same index as both
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/// `i` and `j` has no effect.
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///
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/// - Parameters:
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/// - i: The index of the first value to swap.
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/// - j: The index of the second value to swap.
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///
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/// - Complexity: O(1)
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@inlinable
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public mutating func swapAt(_ i: Index, _ j: Index) {
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guard i != j else { return }
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let tmp = self[i]
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self[i] = self[j]
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self[j] = tmp
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}
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}
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// the legacy swap free function
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//
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/// Exchanges the values of the two arguments.
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///
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/// The two arguments must not alias each other. To swap two elements of a
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/// mutable collection, use the `swapAt(_:_:)` method of that collection
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/// instead of this function.
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///
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/// - Parameters:
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/// - a: The first value to swap.
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/// - b: The second value to swap.
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@inlinable
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public func swap<T>(_ a: inout T, _ b: inout T) {
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// Semantically equivalent to (a, b) = (b, a).
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// Microoptimized to avoid retain/release traffic.
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let p1 = Builtin.addressof(&a)
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let p2 = Builtin.addressof(&b)
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_debugPrecondition(
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p1 != p2,
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"swapping a location with itself is not supported")
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// Take from P1.
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let tmp: T = Builtin.take(p1)
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// Transfer P2 into P1.
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Builtin.initialize(Builtin.take(p2) as T, p1)
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// Initialize P2.
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Builtin.initialize(tmp, p2)
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}
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