I am trying to use NumberFormatter
with Swift 3 Decimal
, but I'm confused as to how Decimal
is really being implemented. The problem I'm having is that Decimal
is a struct, so I have to bridge it to an NSDecimalNumber
every time I want to use a formatter, which I'd like to avoid.
let formatter = NumberFormatter() formatter.numberStyle = .decimal let decimal = Decimal(integerLiteral: 3) let string = formatter.string(from: decimal as NSDecimalNumber)
Is the ideal workaround for this to implement my own extension that takes a Decimal
?
extension NumberFormatter { open func string(from number: Decimal) -> String? { return string(from: number as NSDecimalNumber) } }
More generally, every time I need to pass in an object type am I going to need to bridge Decimal
or write more extensions?
EDIT
I guess I'm wondering more generally about NSDecimal
Decimal
and NSDecimalNumber
in Swift 3. It's not clear to me at all what's going on here. Should I be replacing NSDecimalNumber
with Decimal
for Swift 3? The docs write:
The Swift overlay to the Foundation framework provides the Decimal structure, which bridges to the NSDecimalNumber class. The Decimal value type offers the same functionality as the NSDecimalNumber reference type, and the two can be used interchangeably in Swift code that interacts with Objective-C APIs. This behavior is similar to how Swift bridges standard string, numeric, and collection types to their corresponding Foundation classes.
Which at first I thought meant that Decimal
was the new NSDecimalNumber
like Error
is the new NSError
- but now I'm not so sure. That also says 'Decimal value type offers the same functionality as the NSDecimalNumber reference type` - is this really true? I can't seem to get much of the same functionality (without bridging it first, of course, is that what they mean?). I have found a few posts and a bit of info here and there, but nothing that convincing. Does anyone have any knowledge or insight?
My app specifically is using NSDecimalNumber
for currency and formatting, so rounding and formatting are a high priority.
I asked my question on the swift-users board and got a wonderful answer, check it out here: https://lists.swift.org/pipermail/swift-users/Week-of-Mon-20161219/004220.html
Text version of the response:
Swift 3 introduced the Decimal class, which at first I thought was supposed to 'replace' NSDecimalNumber in Swift, like Error is the new NSError, etc. However, upon further investigation, it's not clear to me that this is actually the case. It appears that Swift 3's Decimal is more just an NSDecimal, but with some bridging so it can use NSDecimalNumber's methods when needed. What I'm wondering is, should I be replacing NSDecimalNumber in my app with Decimal? Is Decimal the successor to NSDecimalNumber in Swift?
Decimal
is actually a struct, not a class, and in fact it's just the Swift name for the NSDecimal
struct in Objective-C. In Swift, functions like NSDecimalAdd
are exposed as operators on Decimal
and are used to satisfy the requirements of various numeric protocols like SignedNumber
.
The end result is that Decimal
is a lot like Int
or Double
—it's a value type which can be conveniently used to do all sorts of math. NSDecimalNumber
, then, is equivalent to NSNumber
.
Since my app is doing a lot of formatting, it would require much casting between Decimal and NSDecimalNumber, or adding of extensions to use, so I don't think it would be natural/convenient without many extensions. Is Swift planning to improve Decimal to be more usable with NumberFormatter, or other object-oriented number APIs? Hopefully I have given enough information to answer my question.
Objective-C APIs which use NSDecimalNumber
should be bridged to Decimal
, just as NSString
is bridged to String
. That bridging may not work for category methods, though; you could expose those to Swift by writing an extension on Decimal
which casts self
to NSDecimalNumber
and then calls through to your Objective-C methods.
Similarly, you should be able to use Decimal
with NumberFormatter
by casting to NSDecimalNumber
, just as you would cast Int
or Double
to NSNumber
to use them with NumberFormatter
.
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