Generic subscripts
Prior to Swift version 4, we could use generics with subscripts only if the generic was defined in the containing type, however we were unable to define a new generic type within the subscript definition. For example, if we had a List
type we could use the generic type defined by the List
type within the subscript as shown in this example:
struct List<T> { /* other implementation code here */ subscript(index: Int) -> T? { return getItemAtIndex(index: index) } }
With Swift version 4 and later, we are able to define generic types within the subscript definition itself. To see how we would do this, let's go ahead and create another very basic generic List
type. The following code shows how to do this:
struct List<T> { private var items = [T]() public mutating func add(item: T) { items.append(item) } public func getItemAtIndex(index: Int) -> T? { if items.count > index { return items[index] } else { ...