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The stdlib is always built with NoncopyableGenerics enabled, so `#if $NoncopyableGenerics` guards in non-inlinable code are superfluous. Additionally, the stdlib's interface no longer needs to support compilers without the feature, so the guards in inlinable code can also be removed.
973 lines
31 KiB
Swift
973 lines
31 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 - 2024 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 type that represents either a wrapped value or the absence of a value.
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///
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/// You use the `Optional` type whenever you use optional values, even if you
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/// never type the word `Optional`. Swift's type system usually shows the
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/// wrapped type's name with a trailing question mark (`?`) instead of showing
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/// the full type name. For example, if a variable has the type `Int?`, that's
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/// just another way of writing `Optional<Int>`. The shortened form is
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/// preferred for ease of reading and writing code.
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///
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/// The types of `shortForm` and `longForm` in the following code sample are
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/// the same:
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///
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/// let shortForm: Int? = Int("42")
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/// let longForm: Optional<Int> = Int("42")
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///
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/// The `Optional` type is an enumeration with two cases. `Optional.none` is
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/// equivalent to the `nil` literal. `Optional.some(Wrapped)` stores a wrapped
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/// value. For example:
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///
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/// let number: Int? = Optional.some(42)
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/// let noNumber: Int? = Optional.none
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/// print(noNumber == nil)
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/// // Prints "true"
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///
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/// You must unwrap the value of an `Optional` instance before you can use it
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/// in many contexts. Because Swift provides several ways to safely unwrap
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/// optional values, you can choose the one that helps you write clear,
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/// concise code.
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///
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/// The following examples use this dictionary of image names and file paths:
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///
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/// let imagePaths = ["star": "/glyphs/star.png",
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/// "portrait": "/images/content/portrait.jpg",
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/// "spacer": "/images/shared/spacer.gif"]
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///
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/// Getting a dictionary's value using a key returns an optional value, so
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/// `imagePaths["star"]` has type `Optional<String>` or, written in the
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/// preferred manner, `String?`.
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///
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/// Optional Binding
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/// ----------------
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///
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/// To conditionally bind the wrapped value of an `Optional` instance to a new
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/// variable, use one of the optional binding control structures, including
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/// `if let`, `guard let`, and `switch`.
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///
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/// if let starPath = imagePaths["star"] {
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/// print("The star image is at '\(starPath)'")
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/// } else {
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/// print("Couldn't find the star image")
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/// }
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/// // Prints "The star image is at '/glyphs/star.png'"
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///
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/// Optional Chaining
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/// -----------------
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///
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/// To safely access the properties and methods of a wrapped instance, use the
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/// postfix optional chaining operator (postfix `?`). The following example uses
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/// optional chaining to access the `hasSuffix(_:)` method on a `String?`
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/// instance.
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///
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/// if imagePaths["star"]?.hasSuffix(".png") == true {
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/// print("The star image is in PNG format")
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/// }
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/// // Prints "The star image is in PNG format"
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///
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/// Using the Nil-Coalescing Operator
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/// ---------------------------------
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///
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/// Use the nil-coalescing operator (`??`) to supply a default value in case
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/// the `Optional` instance is `nil`. Here a default path is supplied for an
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/// image that is missing from `imagePaths`.
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///
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/// let defaultImagePath = "/images/default.png"
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/// let heartPath = imagePaths["heart"] ?? defaultImagePath
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/// print(heartPath)
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/// // Prints "/images/default.png"
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///
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/// The `??` operator also works with another `Optional` instance on the
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/// right-hand side. As a result, you can chain multiple `??` operators
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/// together.
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///
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/// let shapePath = imagePaths["cir"] ?? imagePaths["squ"] ?? defaultImagePath
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/// print(shapePath)
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/// // Prints "/images/default.png"
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///
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/// Unconditional Unwrapping
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/// ------------------------
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///
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/// When you're certain that an instance of `Optional` contains a value, you
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/// can unconditionally unwrap the value by using the forced
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/// unwrap operator (postfix `!`). For example, the result of the failable `Int`
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/// initializer is unconditionally unwrapped in the example below.
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///
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/// let number = Int("42")!
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/// print(number)
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/// // Prints "42"
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///
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/// You can also perform unconditional optional chaining by using the postfix
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/// `!` operator.
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///
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/// let isPNG = imagePaths["star"]!.hasSuffix(".png")
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/// print(isPNG)
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/// // Prints "true"
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///
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/// Unconditionally unwrapping a `nil` instance with `!` triggers a runtime
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/// error.
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@frozen
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public enum Optional<Wrapped: ~Copyable>: ~Copyable {
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// The compiler has special knowledge of Optional<Wrapped>, including the fact
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// that it is an `enum` with cases named `none` and `some`.
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/// The absence of a value.
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///
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/// In code, the absence of a value is typically written using the `nil`
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/// literal rather than the explicit `.none` enumeration case.
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case none
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/// The presence of a value, stored as `Wrapped`.
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case some(Wrapped)
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}
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extension Optional: Copyable where Wrapped: Copyable {}
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extension Optional: Sendable where Wrapped: ~Copyable & Sendable { }
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extension Optional: BitwiseCopyable where Wrapped: BitwiseCopyable { }
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@_preInverseGenerics
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extension Optional: ExpressibleByNilLiteral where Wrapped: ~Copyable {
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/// Creates an instance initialized with `nil`.
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///
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/// Do not call this initializer directly. It is used by the compiler when you
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/// initialize an `Optional` instance with a `nil` literal. For example:
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///
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/// var i: Index? = nil
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///
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/// In this example, the assignment to the `i` variable calls this
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/// initializer behind the scenes.
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@_transparent
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@_preInverseGenerics
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public init(nilLiteral: ()) {
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self = .none
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}
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}
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extension Optional where Wrapped: ~Copyable {
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/// Creates an instance that stores the given value.
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@_transparent
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@_preInverseGenerics
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public init(_ some: consuming Wrapped) { self = .some(some) }
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}
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extension Optional {
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/// Evaluates the given closure when this `Optional` instance is not `nil`,
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/// passing the unwrapped value as a parameter.
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///
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/// Use the `map` method with a closure that returns a non-optional value.
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/// This example performs an arithmetic operation on an
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/// optional integer.
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///
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/// let possibleNumber: Int? = Int("42")
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/// let possibleSquare = possibleNumber.map { $0 * $0 }
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/// print(possibleSquare)
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/// // Prints "Optional(1764)"
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///
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/// let noNumber: Int? = nil
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/// let noSquare = noNumber.map { $0 * $0 }
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/// print(noSquare)
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/// // Prints "nil"
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///
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/// - Parameter transform: A closure that takes the unwrapped value
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/// of the instance.
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/// - Returns: The result of the given closure. If this instance is `nil`,
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/// returns `nil`.
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@_alwaysEmitIntoClient
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public func map<E: Error, U: ~Copyable>(
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_ transform: (Wrapped) throws(E) -> U
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) throws(E) -> U? {
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switch self {
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case .some(let y):
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return .some(try transform(y))
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case .none:
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return .none
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}
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}
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@_spi(SwiftStdlibLegacyABI) @available(swift, obsoleted: 1)
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@usableFromInline
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internal func map<U>(
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_ transform: (Wrapped) throws -> U
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) rethrows -> U? {
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switch self {
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case .some(let y):
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return .some(try transform(y))
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case .none:
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return .none
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}
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}
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}
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extension Optional where Wrapped: ~Copyable {
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// FIXME(NCG): Make this public.
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@_alwaysEmitIntoClient
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public consuming func _consumingMap<U: ~Copyable, E: Error>(
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_ transform: (consuming Wrapped) throws(E) -> U
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) throws(E) -> U? {
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switch consume self {
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case .some(let y):
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return .some(try transform(y))
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case .none:
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return .none
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}
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}
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// FIXME(NCG): Make this public.
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@_alwaysEmitIntoClient
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public borrowing func _borrowingMap<U: ~Copyable, E: Error>(
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_ transform: (borrowing Wrapped) throws(E) -> U
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) throws(E) -> U? {
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switch self {
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case .some(let y):
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return .some(try transform(y))
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case .none:
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return .none
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}
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}
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}
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extension Optional {
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/// Evaluates the given closure when this `Optional` instance is not `nil`,
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/// passing the unwrapped value as a parameter.
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///
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/// Use the `flatMap` method with a closure that returns an optional value.
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/// This example performs an arithmetic operation with an optional result on
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/// an optional integer.
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///
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/// let possibleNumber: Int? = Int("42")
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/// let nonOverflowingSquare = possibleNumber.flatMap { x -> Int? in
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/// let (result, overflowed) = x.multipliedReportingOverflow(by: x)
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/// return overflowed ? nil : result
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/// }
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/// print(nonOverflowingSquare)
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/// // Prints "Optional(1764)"
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///
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/// - Parameter transform: A closure that takes the unwrapped value
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/// of the instance.
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/// - Returns: The result of the given closure. If this instance is `nil`,
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/// returns `nil`.
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@_alwaysEmitIntoClient
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public func flatMap<E: Error, U: ~Copyable>(
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_ transform: (Wrapped) throws(E) -> U?
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) throws(E) -> U? {
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switch self {
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case .some(let y):
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return try transform(y)
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case .none:
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return .none
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}
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}
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@_spi(SwiftStdlibLegacyABI) @available(swift, obsoleted: 1)
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@usableFromInline
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internal func flatMap<U>(
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_ transform: (Wrapped) throws -> U?
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) rethrows -> U? {
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switch self {
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case .some(let y):
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return try transform(y)
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case .none:
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return .none
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}
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}
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}
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extension Optional where Wrapped: ~Copyable {
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// FIXME(NCG): Make this public.
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@_alwaysEmitIntoClient
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public consuming func _consumingFlatMap<U: ~Copyable, E: Error>(
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_ transform: (consuming Wrapped) throws(E) -> U?
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) throws(E) -> U? {
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switch consume self {
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case .some(let y):
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return try transform(consume y)
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case .none:
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return .none
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}
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}
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// FIXME(NCG): Make this public.
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@_alwaysEmitIntoClient
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public func _borrowingFlatMap<U: ~Copyable, E: Error>(
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_ transform: (borrowing Wrapped) throws(E) -> U?
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) throws(E) -> U? {
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switch self {
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case .some(let y):
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return try transform(y)
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case .none:
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return .none
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}
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}
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}
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extension Optional {
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/// The wrapped value of this instance, unwrapped without checking whether
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/// the instance is `nil`.
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///
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/// The `unsafelyUnwrapped` property provides the same value as the forced
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/// unwrap operator (postfix `!`). However, in optimized builds (`-O`), no
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/// check is performed to ensure that the current instance actually has a
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/// value. Accessing this property in the case of a `nil` value is a serious
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/// programming error and could lead to undefined behavior or a runtime
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/// error.
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///
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/// In debug builds (`-Onone`), the `unsafelyUnwrapped` property has the same
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/// behavior as using the postfix `!` operator and triggers a runtime error
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/// if the instance is `nil`.
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///
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/// The `unsafelyUnwrapped` property is recommended over calling the
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/// `unsafeBitCast(_:)` function because the property is more restrictive
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/// and because accessing the property still performs checking in debug
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/// builds.
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///
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/// - Warning: This property trades safety for performance. Use
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/// `unsafelyUnwrapped` only when you are confident that this instance
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/// will never be equal to `nil` and only after you've tried using the
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/// postfix `!` operator.
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@inlinable
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public var unsafelyUnwrapped: Wrapped {
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@inline(__always)
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get {
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if let x = self {
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return x
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}
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_debugPreconditionFailure("unsafelyUnwrapped of nil optional")
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}
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}
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}
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extension Optional where Wrapped: ~Copyable {
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// FIXME(NCG): Do we want this? It seems like we do. Make this public.
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@_alwaysEmitIntoClient
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public consuming func _consumingUnsafelyUnwrap() -> Wrapped {
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switch consume self {
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case .some(let x):
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return x
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case .none:
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_debugPreconditionFailure("consumingUsafelyUnwrap of nil optional")
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}
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}
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}
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extension Optional {
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/// - Returns: `unsafelyUnwrapped`.
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///
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/// This version is for internal stdlib use; it avoids any checking
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/// overhead for users, even in Debug builds.
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@inlinable
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internal var _unsafelyUnwrappedUnchecked: Wrapped {
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@inline(__always)
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get {
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if let x = self {
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return x
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}
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_internalInvariantFailure("_unsafelyUnwrappedUnchecked of nil optional")
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}
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}
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}
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extension Optional where Wrapped: ~Copyable {
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/// - Returns: `unsafelyUnwrapped`.
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///
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/// This version is for internal stdlib use; it avoids any checking
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/// overhead for users, even in Debug builds.
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@_alwaysEmitIntoClient
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internal consuming func _consumingUncheckedUnwrapped() -> Wrapped {
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if let x = self {
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return x
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}
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_internalInvariantFailure("_uncheckedUnwrapped of nil optional")
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}
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}
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extension Optional where Wrapped: ~Copyable {
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/// Takes the wrapped value being stored in this instance and returns it while
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/// also setting the instance to `nil`. If there is no value being stored in
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/// this instance, this returns `nil` instead.
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///
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/// var numberOfShoes: Int? = 34
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///
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/// if let numberOfShoes = numberOfShoes.take() {
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/// print(numberOfShoes)
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/// // Prints "34"
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/// }
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///
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/// print(numberOfShoes)
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/// // Prints "nil"
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///
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/// - Returns: The wrapped value being stored in this instance. If this
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/// instance is `nil`, returns `nil`.
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@_alwaysEmitIntoClient
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public mutating func take() -> Self {
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let result = consume self
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self = nil
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return result
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}
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}
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@_unavailableInEmbedded
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extension Optional: CustomDebugStringConvertible {
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/// A textual representation of this instance, suitable for debugging.
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public var debugDescription: String {
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switch self {
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case .some(let value):
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#if !SWIFT_STDLIB_STATIC_PRINT
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var result = "Optional("
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#if !$Embedded
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debugPrint(value, terminator: "", to: &result)
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#else
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_ = value
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"(cannot print value in embedded Swift)".write(to: &result)
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#endif
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result += ")"
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return result
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#else
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return "(optional printing not available)"
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#endif
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case .none:
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return "nil"
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}
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}
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}
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#if SWIFT_ENABLE_REFLECTION
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extension Optional: CustomReflectable {
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public var customMirror: Mirror {
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switch self {
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case .some(let value):
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return Mirror(
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self,
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children: [ "some": value ],
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displayStyle: .optional)
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case .none:
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return Mirror(self, children: [:], displayStyle: .optional)
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}
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}
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}
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#endif
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@_transparent
|
|
public // COMPILER_INTRINSIC
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func _diagnoseUnexpectedNilOptional(_filenameStart: Builtin.RawPointer,
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_filenameLength: Builtin.Word,
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_filenameIsASCII: Builtin.Int1,
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_line: Builtin.Word,
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_isImplicitUnwrap: Builtin.Int1) {
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// Cannot use _preconditionFailure as the file and line info would not be
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// printed.
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if Bool(_isImplicitUnwrap) {
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_preconditionFailure(
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"Unexpectedly found nil while implicitly unwrapping an Optional value",
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file: StaticString(_start: _filenameStart,
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utf8CodeUnitCount: _filenameLength,
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isASCII: _filenameIsASCII),
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line: UInt(_line))
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} else {
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_preconditionFailure(
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"Unexpectedly found nil while unwrapping an Optional value",
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file: StaticString(_start: _filenameStart,
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utf8CodeUnitCount: _filenameLength,
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isASCII: _filenameIsASCII),
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line: UInt(_line))
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}
|
|
}
|
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|
|
extension Optional: Equatable where Wrapped: Equatable {
|
|
/// Returns a Boolean value indicating whether two optional instances are
|
|
/// equal.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Use this equal-to operator (`==`) to compare any two optional instances of
|
|
/// a type that conforms to the `Equatable` protocol. The comparison returns
|
|
/// `true` if both arguments are `nil` or if the two arguments wrap values
|
|
/// that are equal. Conversely, the comparison returns `false` if only one of
|
|
/// the arguments is `nil` or if the two arguments wrap values that are not
|
|
/// equal.
|
|
///
|
|
/// let group1 = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
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/// let group2 = [1, 3, 5, 7, 9]
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/// if group1.first == group2.first {
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/// print("The two groups start the same.")
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/// }
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/// // Prints "The two groups start the same."
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///
|
|
/// You can also use this operator to compare a non-optional value to an
|
|
/// optional that wraps the same type. The non-optional value is wrapped as an
|
|
/// optional before the comparison is made. In the following example, the
|
|
/// `numberToMatch` constant is wrapped as an optional before comparing to the
|
|
/// optional `numberFromString`:
|
|
///
|
|
/// let numberToMatch: Int = 23
|
|
/// let numberFromString: Int? = Int("23") // Optional(23)
|
|
/// if numberToMatch == numberFromString {
|
|
/// print("It's a match!")
|
|
/// }
|
|
/// // Prints "It's a match!"
|
|
///
|
|
/// An instance that is expressed as a literal can also be used with this
|
|
/// operator. In the next example, an integer literal is compared with the
|
|
/// optional integer `numberFromString`. The literal `23` is inferred as an
|
|
/// `Int` instance and then wrapped as an optional before the comparison is
|
|
/// performed.
|
|
///
|
|
/// if 23 == numberFromString {
|
|
/// print("It's a match!")
|
|
/// }
|
|
/// // Prints "It's a match!"
|
|
///
|
|
/// - Parameters:
|
|
/// - lhs: An optional value to compare.
|
|
/// - rhs: Another optional value to compare.
|
|
@_transparent
|
|
public static func ==(lhs: Wrapped?, rhs: Wrapped?) -> Bool {
|
|
switch (lhs, rhs) {
|
|
case let (l?, r?):
|
|
return l == r
|
|
case (nil, nil):
|
|
return true
|
|
default:
|
|
return false
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
extension Optional: Hashable where Wrapped: Hashable {
|
|
/// Hashes the essential components of this value by feeding them into the
|
|
/// given hasher.
|
|
///
|
|
/// - Parameter hasher: The hasher to use when combining the components
|
|
/// of this instance.
|
|
@inlinable
|
|
public func hash(into hasher: inout Hasher) {
|
|
switch self {
|
|
case .none:
|
|
hasher.combine(0 as UInt8)
|
|
case .some(let wrapped):
|
|
hasher.combine(1 as UInt8)
|
|
hasher.combine(wrapped)
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Enable pattern matching against the nil literal, even if the element type
|
|
// isn't equatable.
|
|
@frozen
|
|
public struct _OptionalNilComparisonType: ExpressibleByNilLiteral {
|
|
/// Create an instance initialized with `nil`.
|
|
@_transparent
|
|
public init(nilLiteral: ()) {
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
extension Optional where Wrapped: ~Copyable {
|
|
/// Returns a Boolean value indicating whether an argument matches `nil`.
|
|
///
|
|
/// You can use the pattern-matching operator (`~=`) to test whether an
|
|
/// optional instance is `nil` even when the wrapped value's type does not
|
|
/// conform to the `Equatable` protocol. The pattern-matching operator is used
|
|
/// internally in `case` statements for pattern matching.
|
|
///
|
|
/// The following example declares the `stream` variable as an optional
|
|
/// instance of a hypothetical `DataStream` type, and then uses a `switch`
|
|
/// statement to determine whether the stream is `nil` or has a configured
|
|
/// value. When evaluating the `nil` case of the `switch` statement, this
|
|
/// operator is called behind the scenes.
|
|
///
|
|
/// var stream: DataStream? = nil
|
|
/// switch stream {
|
|
/// case nil:
|
|
/// print("No data stream is configured.")
|
|
/// case let x?:
|
|
/// print("The data stream has \(x.availableBytes) bytes available.")
|
|
/// }
|
|
/// // Prints "No data stream is configured."
|
|
///
|
|
/// - Note: To test whether an instance is `nil` in an `if` statement, use the
|
|
/// equal-to operator (`==`) instead of the pattern-matching operator. The
|
|
/// pattern-matching operator is primarily intended to enable `case`
|
|
/// statement pattern matching.
|
|
///
|
|
/// - Parameters:
|
|
/// - lhs: A `nil` literal.
|
|
/// - rhs: A value to match against `nil`.
|
|
@_transparent
|
|
@_preInverseGenerics
|
|
public static func ~=(
|
|
lhs: _OptionalNilComparisonType,
|
|
rhs: borrowing Wrapped?
|
|
) -> Bool {
|
|
switch rhs {
|
|
case .some:
|
|
return false
|
|
case .none:
|
|
return true
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Enable equality comparisons against the nil literal, even if the
|
|
// element type isn't equatable
|
|
|
|
/// Returns a Boolean value indicating whether the left-hand-side argument is
|
|
/// `nil`.
|
|
///
|
|
/// You can use this equal-to operator (`==`) to test whether an optional
|
|
/// instance is `nil` even when the wrapped value's type does not conform to
|
|
/// the `Equatable` protocol.
|
|
///
|
|
/// The following example declares the `stream` variable as an optional
|
|
/// instance of a hypothetical `DataStream` type. Although `DataStream` is not
|
|
/// an `Equatable` type, this operator allows checking whether `stream` is
|
|
/// `nil`.
|
|
///
|
|
/// var stream: DataStream? = nil
|
|
/// if stream == nil {
|
|
/// print("No data stream is configured.")
|
|
/// }
|
|
/// // Prints "No data stream is configured."
|
|
///
|
|
/// - Parameters:
|
|
/// - lhs: A value to compare to `nil`.
|
|
/// - rhs: A `nil` literal.
|
|
@_transparent
|
|
@_preInverseGenerics
|
|
public static func ==(
|
|
lhs: borrowing Wrapped?,
|
|
rhs: _OptionalNilComparisonType
|
|
) -> Bool {
|
|
switch lhs {
|
|
case .some:
|
|
return false
|
|
case .none:
|
|
return true
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Returns a Boolean value indicating whether the left-hand-side argument is
|
|
/// not `nil`.
|
|
///
|
|
/// You can use this not-equal-to operator (`!=`) to test whether an optional
|
|
/// instance is not `nil` even when the wrapped value's type does not conform
|
|
/// to the `Equatable` protocol.
|
|
///
|
|
/// The following example declares the `stream` variable as an optional
|
|
/// instance of a hypothetical `DataStream` type. Although `DataStream` is not
|
|
/// an `Equatable` type, this operator allows checking whether `stream` wraps
|
|
/// a value and is therefore not `nil`.
|
|
///
|
|
/// var stream: DataStream? = fetchDataStream()
|
|
/// if stream != nil {
|
|
/// print("The data stream has been configured.")
|
|
/// }
|
|
/// // Prints "The data stream has been configured."
|
|
///
|
|
/// - Parameters:
|
|
/// - lhs: A value to compare to `nil`.
|
|
/// - rhs: A `nil` literal.
|
|
@_transparent
|
|
@_preInverseGenerics
|
|
public static func !=(
|
|
lhs: borrowing Wrapped?,
|
|
rhs: _OptionalNilComparisonType
|
|
) -> Bool {
|
|
switch lhs {
|
|
case .some:
|
|
return true
|
|
case .none:
|
|
return false
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Returns a Boolean value indicating whether the right-hand-side argument is
|
|
/// `nil`.
|
|
///
|
|
/// You can use this equal-to operator (`==`) to test whether an optional
|
|
/// instance is `nil` even when the wrapped value's type does not conform to
|
|
/// the `Equatable` protocol.
|
|
///
|
|
/// The following example declares the `stream` variable as an optional
|
|
/// instance of a hypothetical `DataStream` type. Although `DataStream` is not
|
|
/// an `Equatable` type, this operator allows checking whether `stream` is
|
|
/// `nil`.
|
|
///
|
|
/// var stream: DataStream? = nil
|
|
/// if nil == stream {
|
|
/// print("No data stream is configured.")
|
|
/// }
|
|
/// // Prints "No data stream is configured."
|
|
///
|
|
/// - Parameters:
|
|
/// - lhs: A `nil` literal.
|
|
/// - rhs: A value to compare to `nil`.
|
|
@_transparent
|
|
@_preInverseGenerics
|
|
public static func ==(
|
|
lhs: _OptionalNilComparisonType,
|
|
rhs: borrowing Wrapped?
|
|
) -> Bool {
|
|
switch rhs {
|
|
case .some:
|
|
return false
|
|
case .none:
|
|
return true
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Returns a Boolean value indicating whether the right-hand-side argument is
|
|
/// not `nil`.
|
|
///
|
|
/// You can use this not-equal-to operator (`!=`) to test whether an optional
|
|
/// instance is not `nil` even when the wrapped value's type does not conform
|
|
/// to the `Equatable` protocol.
|
|
///
|
|
/// The following example declares the `stream` variable as an optional
|
|
/// instance of a hypothetical `DataStream` type. Although `DataStream` is not
|
|
/// an `Equatable` type, this operator allows checking whether `stream` wraps
|
|
/// a value and is therefore not `nil`.
|
|
///
|
|
/// var stream: DataStream? = fetchDataStream()
|
|
/// if nil != stream {
|
|
/// print("The data stream has been configured.")
|
|
/// }
|
|
/// // Prints "The data stream has been configured."
|
|
///
|
|
/// - Parameters:
|
|
/// - lhs: A `nil` literal.
|
|
/// - rhs: A value to compare to `nil`.
|
|
@_transparent
|
|
@_preInverseGenerics
|
|
public static func !=(
|
|
lhs: _OptionalNilComparisonType,
|
|
rhs: borrowing Wrapped?
|
|
) -> Bool {
|
|
switch rhs {
|
|
case .some:
|
|
return true
|
|
case .none:
|
|
return false
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Performs a nil-coalescing operation, returning the wrapped value of an
|
|
/// `Optional` instance or a default value.
|
|
///
|
|
/// A nil-coalescing operation unwraps the left-hand side if it has a value, or
|
|
/// it returns the right-hand side as a default. The result of this operation
|
|
/// will have the non-optional type of the left-hand side's `Wrapped` type.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This operator uses short-circuit evaluation: `optional` is checked first,
|
|
/// and `defaultValue` is evaluated only if `optional` is `nil`. For example:
|
|
///
|
|
/// func getDefault() -> Int {
|
|
/// print("Calculating default...")
|
|
/// return 42
|
|
/// }
|
|
///
|
|
/// let goodNumber = Int("100") ?? getDefault()
|
|
/// // goodNumber == 100
|
|
///
|
|
/// let notSoGoodNumber = Int("invalid-input") ?? getDefault()
|
|
/// // Prints "Calculating default..."
|
|
/// // notSoGoodNumber == 42
|
|
///
|
|
/// In this example, `goodNumber` is assigned a value of `100` because
|
|
/// `Int("100")` succeeded in returning a non-`nil` result. When
|
|
/// `notSoGoodNumber` is initialized, `Int("invalid-input")` fails and returns
|
|
/// `nil`, and so the `getDefault()` method is called to supply a default
|
|
/// value.
|
|
///
|
|
/// - Parameters:
|
|
/// - optional: An optional value.
|
|
/// - defaultValue: A value to use as a default. `defaultValue` is the same
|
|
/// type as the `Wrapped` type of `optional`.
|
|
@_transparent
|
|
@_alwaysEmitIntoClient
|
|
public func ?? <T: ~Copyable>(
|
|
optional: consuming T?,
|
|
defaultValue: @autoclosure () throws -> T // FIXME: typed throw
|
|
) rethrows -> T {
|
|
switch consume optional {
|
|
case .some(let value):
|
|
return value
|
|
case .none:
|
|
return try defaultValue()
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@_spi(SwiftStdlibLegacyABI) @available(swift, obsoleted: 1)
|
|
@_silgen_name("$ss2qqoiyxxSg_xyKXKtKlF")
|
|
@usableFromInline
|
|
internal func _legacy_abi_optionalNilCoalescingOperator <T>(
|
|
optional: T?,
|
|
defaultValue: @autoclosure () throws -> T
|
|
) rethrows -> T {
|
|
switch optional {
|
|
case .some(let value):
|
|
return value
|
|
case .none:
|
|
return try defaultValue()
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Performs a nil-coalescing operation, returning the wrapped value of an
|
|
/// `Optional` instance or a default `Optional` value.
|
|
///
|
|
/// A nil-coalescing operation unwraps the left-hand side if it has a value, or
|
|
/// returns the right-hand side as a default. The result of this operation
|
|
/// will be the same type as its arguments.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This operator uses short-circuit evaluation: `optional` is checked first,
|
|
/// and `defaultValue` is evaluated only if `optional` is `nil`. For example:
|
|
///
|
|
/// let goodNumber = Int("100") ?? Int("42")
|
|
/// print(goodNumber)
|
|
/// // Prints "Optional(100)"
|
|
///
|
|
/// let notSoGoodNumber = Int("invalid-input") ?? Int("42")
|
|
/// print(notSoGoodNumber)
|
|
/// // Prints "Optional(42)"
|
|
///
|
|
/// In this example, `goodNumber` is assigned a value of `100` because
|
|
/// `Int("100")` succeeds in returning a non-`nil` result. When
|
|
/// `notSoGoodNumber` is initialized, `Int("invalid-input")` fails and returns
|
|
/// `nil`, and so `Int("42")` is called to supply a default value.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Because the result of this nil-coalescing operation is itself an optional
|
|
/// value, you can chain default values by using `??` multiple times. The
|
|
/// first optional value that isn't `nil` stops the chain and becomes the
|
|
/// result of the whole expression. The next example tries to find the correct
|
|
/// text for a greeting in two separate dictionaries before falling back to a
|
|
/// static default.
|
|
///
|
|
/// let greeting = userPrefs[greetingKey] ??
|
|
/// defaults[greetingKey] ?? "Greetings!"
|
|
///
|
|
/// If `userPrefs[greetingKey]` has a value, that value is assigned to
|
|
/// `greeting`. If not, any value in `defaults[greetingKey]` will succeed, and
|
|
/// if not that, `greeting` will be set to the non-optional default value,
|
|
/// `"Greetings!"`.
|
|
///
|
|
/// - Parameters:
|
|
/// - optional: An optional value.
|
|
/// - defaultValue: A value to use as a default. `defaultValue` and
|
|
/// `optional` have the same type.
|
|
@_transparent
|
|
@_alwaysEmitIntoClient
|
|
// FIXME: This needs to support typed throws.
|
|
public func ?? <T: ~Copyable>(
|
|
optional: consuming T?,
|
|
defaultValue: @autoclosure () throws -> T?
|
|
) rethrows -> T? {
|
|
switch consume optional {
|
|
case .some(let value):
|
|
return value
|
|
case .none:
|
|
return try defaultValue()
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@_spi(SwiftStdlibLegacyABI) @available(swift, obsoleted: 1)
|
|
@usableFromInline
|
|
internal func ?? <T>(
|
|
optional: T?,
|
|
defaultValue: @autoclosure () throws -> T?
|
|
) rethrows -> T? {
|
|
switch optional {
|
|
case .some(let value):
|
|
return value
|
|
case .none:
|
|
return try defaultValue()
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
|
|
// Bridging
|
|
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
|
|
|
|
#if _runtime(_ObjC)
|
|
extension Optional: _ObjectiveCBridgeable {
|
|
// The object that represents `none` for an Optional of this type.
|
|
internal static var _nilSentinel: AnyObject {
|
|
@_silgen_name("_swift_Foundation_getOptionalNilSentinelObject")
|
|
get
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
public func _bridgeToObjectiveC() -> AnyObject {
|
|
// Bridge a wrapped value by unwrapping.
|
|
if let value = self {
|
|
return _bridgeAnythingToObjectiveC(value)
|
|
}
|
|
// Bridge nil using a sentinel.
|
|
return type(of: self)._nilSentinel
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
public static func _forceBridgeFromObjectiveC(
|
|
_ source: AnyObject,
|
|
result: inout Optional<Wrapped>?
|
|
) {
|
|
// Map the nil sentinel back to .none.
|
|
// NB that the signature of _forceBridgeFromObjectiveC adds another level
|
|
// of optionality, so we need to wrap the immediate result of the conversion
|
|
// in `.some`.
|
|
if source === _nilSentinel {
|
|
result = .some(.none)
|
|
return
|
|
}
|
|
// Otherwise, force-bridge the underlying value.
|
|
let unwrappedResult = source as! Wrapped
|
|
result = .some(.some(unwrappedResult))
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
public static func _conditionallyBridgeFromObjectiveC(
|
|
_ source: AnyObject,
|
|
result: inout Optional<Wrapped>?
|
|
) -> Bool {
|
|
// Map the nil sentinel back to .none.
|
|
// NB that the signature of _forceBridgeFromObjectiveC adds another level
|
|
// of optionality, so we need to wrap the immediate result of the conversion
|
|
// in `.some` to indicate success of the bridging operation, with a nil
|
|
// result.
|
|
if source === _nilSentinel {
|
|
result = .some(.none)
|
|
return true
|
|
}
|
|
// Otherwise, try to bridge the underlying value.
|
|
if let unwrappedResult = source as? Wrapped {
|
|
result = .some(.some(unwrappedResult))
|
|
return true
|
|
} else {
|
|
result = .none
|
|
return false
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@_effects(readonly)
|
|
public static func _unconditionallyBridgeFromObjectiveC(_ source: AnyObject?)
|
|
-> Optional<Wrapped> {
|
|
if let nonnullSource = source {
|
|
// Map the nil sentinel back to none.
|
|
if nonnullSource === _nilSentinel {
|
|
return .none
|
|
} else {
|
|
return .some(nonnullSource as! Wrapped)
|
|
}
|
|
} else {
|
|
// If we unexpectedly got nil, just map it to `none` too.
|
|
return .none
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
#endif
|