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Mastering Swift 3

You're reading from   Mastering Swift 3 Build incredible apps for iOS and OS X

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786466129
Length 392 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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Jon Hoffman Jon Hoffman
Author Profile Icon Jon Hoffman
Jon Hoffman
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Taking the First Steps with Swift FREE CHAPTER 2. Learning About Variables, Constants, Strings, and Operators 3. Using Swift Collections and the Tuple Type 4. Control Flow and Functions 5. Classes and Structures 6. Using Protocols and Protocol Extensions 7. Protocol-Oriented Design 8. Writing Safer Code with Availability and Error Handling 9. Custom Subscripting 10. Using Optional Types 11. Working with Generics 12. Working with Closures 13. Using Mix and Match 14. Concurrency and Parallelism in Swift 15. Swift Formatting and Style Guide 16. Swifts Core Libraries 17. Adopting Design Patterns in Swift

Read-only custom subscripts


We can also make the subscript read-only by either not declaring a setter method within the subscript or by not implicitly declaring a getter or setter method. The following code shows how to declare a read-only property by not declaring a getter or setter method:

//No getter/setters implicitly declared 
subscript(index: Int) ->String { 
  return names[index] 
} 

The following example shows how to declare a read-only property by only declaring a getter method:

//Declaring only a getter 
subscript(index: Int) ->String { 
  get { 
    return names[index] 
  } 
} 

In the first example, we do not define either a getter or setter method, therefore Swift sets the subscript as read-only and the code acts as if it was in a getter definition. In the second example, we specifically set the code in a getter definition. Both examples are valid read-only subscripts. One thing to note is write-only subscripts are not valid...

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