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swift-mirror/stdlib/public/core/Result.swift
Erik Eckstein e7efa6cb15 stdlib: Make Result methods inlinable
The "Result" type is expected to have no overhead when used.
This requires the member functions to be inlinable.
Which is probably okay for library evolution, because it's unlikely that those methods change in an incompatible way.
2020-07-29 21:57:51 +02:00

193 lines
6.6 KiB
Swift

//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This source file is part of the Swift.org open source project
//
// Copyright (c) 2018 Apple Inc. and the Swift project authors
// Licensed under Apache License v2.0 with Runtime Library Exception
//
// See https://swift.org/LICENSE.txt for license information
// See https://swift.org/CONTRIBUTORS.txt for the list of Swift project authors
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// A value that represents either a success or a failure, including an
/// associated value in each case.
@frozen
public enum Result<Success, Failure: Error> {
/// A success, storing a `Success` value.
case success(Success)
/// A failure, storing a `Failure` value.
case failure(Failure)
/// Returns a new result, mapping any success value using the given
/// transformation.
///
/// Use this method when you need to transform the value of a `Result`
/// instance when it represents a success. The following example transforms
/// the integer success value of a result into a string:
///
/// func getNextInteger() -> Result<Int, Error> { /* ... */ }
///
/// let integerResult = getNextInteger()
/// // integerResult == .success(5)
/// let stringResult = integerResult.map({ String($0) })
/// // stringResult == .success("5")
///
/// - Parameter transform: A closure that takes the success value of this
/// instance.
/// - Returns: A `Result` instance with the result of evaluating `transform`
/// as the new success value if this instance represents a success.
@inlinable
public func map<NewSuccess>(
_ transform: (Success) -> NewSuccess
) -> Result<NewSuccess, Failure> {
switch self {
case let .success(success):
return .success(transform(success))
case let .failure(failure):
return .failure(failure)
}
}
/// Returns a new result, mapping any failure value using the given
/// transformation.
///
/// Use this method when you need to transform the value of a `Result`
/// instance when it represents a failure. The following example transforms
/// the error value of a result by wrapping it in a custom `Error` type:
///
/// struct DatedError: Error {
/// var error: Error
/// var date: Date
///
/// init(_ error: Error) {
/// self.error = error
/// self.date = Date()
/// }
/// }
///
/// let result: Result<Int, Error> = // ...
/// // result == .failure(<error value>)
/// let resultWithDatedError = result.mapError({ e in DatedError(e) })
/// // result == .failure(DatedError(error: <error value>, date: <date>))
///
/// - Parameter transform: A closure that takes the failure value of the
/// instance.
/// - Returns: A `Result` instance with the result of evaluating `transform`
/// as the new failure value if this instance represents a failure.
@inlinable
public func mapError<NewFailure>(
_ transform: (Failure) -> NewFailure
) -> Result<Success, NewFailure> {
switch self {
case let .success(success):
return .success(success)
case let .failure(failure):
return .failure(transform(failure))
}
}
/// Returns a new result, mapping any success value using the given
/// transformation and unwrapping the produced result.
///
/// Use this method to avoid a nested result when your transformation
/// produces another `Result` type.
///
/// In this example, note the difference in the result of using `map` and
/// `flatMap` with a transformation that returns an result type.
///
/// func getNextInteger() -> Result<Int, Error> {
/// .success(4)
/// }
/// func getNextAfterInteger(_ n: Int) -> Result<Int, Error> {
/// .success(n + 1)
/// }
///
/// let result = getNextInteger().map({ getNextAfterInteger($0) })
/// // result == .success(.success(5))
///
/// let result = getNextInteger().flatMap({ getNextAfterInteger($0) })
/// // result == .success(5)
///
/// - Parameter transform: A closure that takes the success value of the
/// instance.
/// - Returns: A `Result` instance with the result of evaluating `transform`
/// as the new failure value if this instance represents a failure.
@inlinable
public func flatMap<NewSuccess>(
_ transform: (Success) -> Result<NewSuccess, Failure>
) -> Result<NewSuccess, Failure> {
switch self {
case let .success(success):
return transform(success)
case let .failure(failure):
return .failure(failure)
}
}
/// Returns a new result, mapping any failure value using the given
/// transformation and unwrapping the produced result.
///
/// - Parameter transform: A closure that takes the failure value of the
/// instance.
/// - Returns: A `Result` instance, either from the closure or the previous
/// `.success`.
@inlinable
public func flatMapError<NewFailure>(
_ transform: (Failure) -> Result<Success, NewFailure>
) -> Result<Success, NewFailure> {
switch self {
case let .success(success):
return .success(success)
case let .failure(failure):
return transform(failure)
}
}
/// Returns the success value as a throwing expression.
///
/// Use this method to retrieve the value of this result if it represents a
/// success, or to catch the value if it represents a failure.
///
/// let integerResult: Result<Int, Error> = .success(5)
/// do {
/// let value = try integerResult.get()
/// print("The value is \(value).")
/// } catch {
/// print("Error retrieving the value: \(error)")
/// }
/// // Prints "The value is 5."
///
/// - Returns: The success value, if the instance represents a success.
/// - Throws: The failure value, if the instance represents a failure.
@inlinable
public func get() throws -> Success {
switch self {
case let .success(success):
return success
case let .failure(failure):
throw failure
}
}
}
extension Result where Failure == Swift.Error {
/// Creates a new result by evaluating a throwing closure, capturing the
/// returned value as a success, or any thrown error as a failure.
///
/// - Parameter body: A throwing closure to evaluate.
@_transparent
public init(catching body: () throws -> Success) {
do {
self = .success(try body())
} catch {
self = .failure(error)
}
}
}
extension Result: Equatable where Success: Equatable, Failure: Equatable { }
extension Result: Hashable where Success: Hashable, Failure: Hashable { }