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Mastering Swift 5.3

You're reading from   Mastering Swift 5.3 Upgrade your knowledge and become an expert in the latest version of the Swift programming language

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800562158
Length 418 pages
Edition 6th Edition
Languages
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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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Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Taking the First Steps with Swift 2. Swift Documentation and Installing Swift FREE CHAPTER 3. Learning about Variables, Constants, Strings, and Operators 4. Optional Types 5. Using Swift Collections 6. Control Flow 7. Functions 8. Classes, Structures, and Protocols 9. Protocols and Protocol Extensions 10. Protocol-Oriented Design 11. Generics 12. Error Handling and Availability 13. Custom Subscripting 14. Working with Closures 15. Advanced and Custom Operators 16. Concurrency and Parallelism in Swift 17. Custom Value Types 18. Memory Management 19. Swift Formatting and Style Guide 20. Adopting Design Patterns in Swift 21. Other Books You May Enjoy
22. Index

Custom operators

Custom operators enable us to declare and implement our own operators outside of the standard operators provided by the Swift language. New operators must be declared globally using the operator keyword. They must also be defined with the infix, prefix, or postfix keywords. Once an operator is defined globally, we are then able to add it to our types using the operator methods as shown in the previous section. Let's take a look at this by adding two new operators: •, which we will use to multiply two points together, and ••, which will be used to square a value. We will add these operators to the MyPoint type that we created in the last section.

The • symbol can be typed by holding down the option key and pressing the number 8 on a computer running macOS.

The first thing we need to do is to declare the operators globally. This can be done with the following code:

infix operator •
prefix operator •...
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