About 16,000,000 results
Open links in new tab
  1. What is _: in Swift telling me? - Stack Overflow

    Jun 17, 2015 · Swift needs a convention for saying what the name of a function is, including not only the function name itself (before the parentheses) but also the external names of the …

  2. Swift await/async - how to wait synchronously for an async task to ...

    Feb 3, 2022 · 77 I'm bridging the sync/async worlds in Swift and doing incremental adoption of async/await. I'm trying to invoke an async function that returns a value from a non async …

  3. Newest 'swift' Questions - Stack Overflow

    Stack Overflow | The World’s Largest Online Community for Developers

  4. ios - Swift `in` keyword meaning? - Stack Overflow

    May 21, 2015 · The question of what purpose in serves has been well-answered by other users here; in summary: in is a keyword defined in the Swift closure syntax as a separator between …

  5. swift if or/and statement like python - Stack Overflow

    swift if or/and statement like python Asked 11 years, 1 month ago Modified 5 years, 6 months ago Viewed 80k times

  6. What is the entry point of swift code execution? - Stack Overflow

    May 6, 2016 · The entry point in a plain Swift module is the file in the module called main.swift. main.swift is the only file which is allowed to have expressions and statements at the top level …

  7. What is the "some" keyword in Swift (UI)? - Stack Overflow

    Jun 3, 2019 · Swift 5.1 does not appear to have some as a keyword, and I don't see what else the word some could be doing there, since it goes where the type usually goes. Is there a new, …

  8. ios - Swift - encode URL - Stack Overflow

    Jul 3, 2014 · 98 Swift 4 & 5 To encode a parameter in URL I find using .alphanumerics character set the easiest option:

  9. How does one declare optional methods in a Swift protocol?

    415 In Swift 2 and onwards it's possible to add default implementations of a protocol. This creates a new way of optional methods in protocols.

  10. swift2 - Swift: guard let vs if let - Stack Overflow

    The Swift Docs on Control Flow explain the idea behind that: Using a guard statement for requirements improves the readability of your code, compared to doing the same check with …