Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

What's the difference between testing an optional for "nil" and ".None"?

I see everywhere in swift language, people testing for optional values with if statements so they can safely force unwrap, in 2 ways:

if optionalValue != .None {   

... some code ...

}

or

if optionalValue != nil {   

... some code ...

}

What's the difference and can it somehow influence my app/code in any way? What's better?

like image 982
Fero Avatar asked Sep 15 '25 08:09

Fero


1 Answers

In normal usage there's no difference, they are interchangeable. .None is an enum representation of the nil (absence of) value implemented by the Optional<T> enum.

The equivalence of .None and nil is thanks to the Optional<T> type implementing the NilLiteralConvertible protocol, and an overload of the != and == operators.

You can implement that protocol in your own classes/structs/enums if you want nil to be assignable, such as:

struct MyStruct : NilLiteralConvertible {
    static func convertFromNilLiteral() -> MyStruct {
        return MyStruct() // <== here you should provide your own implementation
    }
}

var t: MyStruct = nil

(note that the variable is not declared as optional)

like image 158
Antonio Avatar answered Sep 17 '25 00:09

Antonio