Printing optional variable - swift

I am trying with these lines of code
class Student {
var name: String
var age: Int?
init(name: String) {
self.name = name
}
func description() -> String {
return age != nil ? "\(name) is \(age) years old." : "\(name) hides his age."
}
}
var me = Student(name: "Daniel")
println(me.description())
me.age = 18
println(me.description())
Above code produces as follow
Daniel hides his age.
Daniel is Optional(18) years old.
My question is why there is Optional (18) there, how can I remove the optional and just printing
Daniel is 18 years old.

You have to understand what an Optional really is. Many Swift beginners think var age: Int? means that age is an Int which may or may not have a value. But it means that age is an Optional which may or may not hold an Int.
Inside your description() function you don't print the Int, but instead you print the Optional. If you want to print the Int you have to unwrap the Optional. You can use "optional binding" to unwrap an Optional:
if let a = age {
// a is an Int
}
If you are sure that the Optional holds an object, you can use "forced unwrapping":
let a = age!
Or in your example, since you already have a test for nil in the description function, you can just change it to:
func description() -> String {
return age != nil ? "\(name) is \(age!) years old." : "\(name) hides his age."
}

To remove it, there are three methods you could employ.
If you are absolutely sure of the type, you can use an exclamation mark to force unwrap it, like this:
// Here is an optional variable:
var age: Int?
// Here is how you would force unwrap it:
var unwrappedAge = age!
If you do force unwrap an optional and it is equal to nil, you may encounter this crash error:
This is not necessarily safe, so here's a method that might prevent crashing in case you are not certain of the type and value:
Methods 2 and three safeguard against this problem.
The Implicitly Unwrapped Optional
if let unwrappedAge = age {
// continue in here
}
Note that the unwrapped type is now Int, rather than Int?.
The guard statement
guard let unwrappedAge = age else {
// continue in here
}
From here, you can go ahead and use the unwrapped variable. Make sure only to force unwrap (with an !), if you are sure of the type of the variable.
Good luck with your project!

For testing/debugging purposes I often want to output optionals as strings without always having to test for nil values, so I created a custom operator.
I improved things even further after reading this answer in another question.
fileprivate protocol _Optional {
func unwrappedString() -> String
}
extension Optional: _Optional {
fileprivate func unwrappedString() -> String {
switch self {
case .some(let wrapped as _Optional): return wrapped.unwrappedString()
case .some(let wrapped): return String(describing: wrapped)
case .none: return String(describing: self)
}
}
}
postfix operator ~? { }
public postfix func ~? <X> (x: X?) -> String {
return x.unwrappedString
}
Obviously the operator (and its attributes) can be tweaked to your liking, or you could make it a function instead. Anyway, this enables you to write simple code like this:
var d: Double? = 12.34
print(d) // Optional(12.34)
print(d~?) // 12.34
d = nil
print(d~?) // nil
Integrating the other guy's protocol idea made it so this even works with nested optionals, which often occur when using optional chaining. For example:
let i: Int??? = 5
print(i) // Optional(Optional(Optional(5)))
print("i: \(i~?)") // i: 5

Update
Simply use me.age ?? "Unknown age!". It works in 3.0.2.
Old Answer
Without force unwrapping (no mach signal/crash if nil) another nice way of doing this would be:
(result["ip"] ?? "unavailable").description.
result["ip"] ?? "unavailable" should have work too, but it doesn't, not in 2.2 at least
Of course, replace "unavailable" with whatever suits you: "nil", "not found" etc

To unwrap optional use age! instead of age. Currently your are printing optional value that could be nil. Thats why it wrapped with Optional.

In swift Optional is something which can be nil in some cases. If you are 100% sure that a variable will have some value always and will not return nil the add ! with the variable to force unwrap it.
In other case if you are not much sure of value then add an if let block or guard to make sure that value exists otherwise it can result in a crash.
For if let block :
if let abc = any_variable {
// do anything you want with 'abc' variable no need to force unwrap now.
}
For guard statement :
guard is a conditional structure to return control if condition is not met.
I prefer to use guard over if let block in many situations as it allows us to return the function if a particular value does not exist.
Like when there is a function where a variable is integral to exist, we can check for it in guard statement and return of it does not exist.
i-e;
guard let abc = any_variable else { return }
We if variable exists the we can use 'abc' in the function outside guard scope.

age is optional type: Optional<Int> so if you compare it to nil it returns false every time if it has a value or if it hasn't. You need to unwrap the optional to get the value.
In your example you don't know is it contains any value so you can use this instead:
if let myAge = age {
// there is a value and it's currently undraped and is stored in a constant
}
else {
// no value
}

I did this to print the value of string (property) from another view controller.
ViewController.swift
var testString:NSString = "I am iOS Developer"
SecondViewController.swift
var obj:ViewController? = ViewController(nibName: "ViewController", bundle: nil)
print("The Value of String is \(obj!.testString)")
Result :
The Value of String is I am iOS Developer

Check out the guard statement:
for student in class {
guard let age = student.age else {
continue
}
// do something with age
}

When having a default value:
print("\(name) is \(age ?? 0) years old")
or when the name is optional:
print("\(name ?? "unknown") is \(age) years old")

I was getting the Optional("String") in my tableview cells.
The first answer is great. And helped me figure it out. Here is what I did, to help the rookies out there like me.
Since I am creating an array in my custom object, I know that it will always have items in the first position, so I can force unwrap it into another variable. Then use that variable to print, or in my case, set to the tableview cell text.
let description = workout.listOfStrings.first!
cell.textLabel?.text = description
Seems so simple now, but took me a while to figure out.

This is not the exact answer to this question, but one reason for this kind of issue.
In my case,
I was not able to remove Optional from a String with "if let" and "guard let".
So use AnyObject instead of Any to remove optional from a string in swift.
Please refer link for the answer.
https://stackoverflow.com/a/51356716/8334818

If you just want to get rid of strings like Optional(xxx) and instead get xxx or nil when you print some values somewhere (like logs), you can add the following extension to your code:
extension Optional {
var orNil: String {
if self == nil {
return "nil"
}
return "\(self!)"
}
}
Then the following code:
var x: Int?
print("x is \(x.orNil)")
x = 10
print("x is \(x.orNil)")
will give you:
x is nil
x is 10
PS. Property naming (orNil) is obviously not the best, but I can't come up with something more clear.

With the following code you can print it or print some default value. That's what XCode generally recommend I think
var someString: String?
print("Some string is \(someString ?? String("Some default"))")

If you are printing some optional which is not directly printable but has a 'to-printable' type method, such as UUID, you can do something like this:
print("value is: \(myOptionalUUID?.uuidString ?? "nil")")
eg
let uuid1 : UUID? = nil
let uuid2 : UUID? = UUID.init()
print("uuid1: \(uuid1?.uuidString ?? "nil")")
print("uuid2: \(uuid2?.uuidString ?? "nil")")
-->
uuid1: nil
uuid2: 0576137D-C6E6-4804-848E-7B4011B40C11

Related

Optional Any? equals to nil

I have:
let value: Any? = myObject[keyPath: myParamKeyPath]
where myParamKeyPath refers to a String?.
Then, when myParam is supposed to be nil, I have:
value == nil returns false
(value as? String?) == nil returns true
Is it possible to check if value equals nil without having to cast it to a String? in the first place? Something like comparing it to NSNull maybe?
Also, I can't change the value type to String? directly as it is also used for other type in my code.
EDIT:
(value as? String?) == nil returns true is irrelevant indeed.
But I can still go print my value pointed by the keypath and it will actually be nil. So I still don't get why value == nil returns false when Im expecting it to be true...
EDIT2 with more code:
let setting = appSettings.settings[indexPath.row]
let value = appSettings[keyPath: setting.keyPath]
let fontAwesome: FontAwesome
switch setting.keyPath {
case \PrinterSettings.printableImageIDs:
fontAwesome = blablabla
case \WeatherSettings.lockscreenImageIDs:
fontAwesome = blablabla
default:
if let value = value as? FakeButtonPlacementSubSettings {
fontAwesome = blablabla
} else {
fontAwesome = value != nil ? .checkSquareO : .squareO
}
}
I am expecting to get fontAwesomeIcon = .squareO but I am getting checkSquareO when the value pointed by myObject[keyPath: myParamKeyPath] is String? (it does the same for another value which is a Bool? later on).
I must be missing something somewhere...
EDIT 3 screenshot:
EDIT 4 more clarification of what I'm trying to do here:
First, thank you again for your help if you get there.
Here are 2 photos about my project current design:
I am using with KVO in my project. I was previously using the objective-c string #keyPath for this. It was working great, but almost all my model had to be converted in #objc. So my current goal here is to remove it and switch to the new Swift 4 keypath system.
To resume: I have a user class containing lot of settings (more than on the screenshot) which can be of several type (and some custom types also).
On the other hand, I have created around 10 "setting editor view controllers": one by type of settings. I would like to use the same setting editor VC to edit each one of the same type of settings.
For example, if the setting to edit is a boolean, I would like to use the "boolean editor VC" and get my selected setting edited by the user's new choice. This is why I am using KVO system. I'm not willing to keep it if you guys have a better solution for this. It would then also get rid of my Any? == nil issue.
How about the following?
struct S {
let x: String?
}
let v1: Any? = S(x: "abc")[keyPath: \S.x]
print(v1 is String? && v1 == nil) // false
let v2: Any? = S(x: nil)[keyPath: \S.x]
print(v2 is String? && v2 == nil) // true
The issue is that your code is assuming the value is String?, whereas it is really String??. I believe this stems from the use of AnyKeyPath:
struct Foo {
let bar: String?
}
let foo = Foo(bar: "baz")
let keyPath: AnyKeyPath = \Foo.bar
print(foo[keyPath: keyPath]) // Optional(Optional("baz"))
let keyPath2 = \Foo.bar
print(foo[keyPath: keyPath2]) // Optional("baz")
I wonder if there is some way to adapt your code to use KeyPath<T, String?> pattern, so that, as you say, your myParamKeyPath really does explicitly refer to a String?, .e.g.:
let foo = Foo(bar: "baz")
let keyPath = \Foo.bar
func keyPathExperiment(object: Any, keyPath: AnyKeyPath) {
print(object[keyPath: keyPath])
}
func keyPathExperiment2<T>(object: T, keyPath: KeyPath<T, String?>) {
print(object[keyPath: keyPath])
}
keyPathExperiment(object: foo, keyPath: keyPath) // Sigh: Optional(Optional("baz"))
keyPathExperiment2(object: foo, keyPath: keyPath) // Good: Optional("baz")
There's not enough in your code snippet for us to see how precisely this might be adapted to your situation.
As Rob Napier said, I wonder if there might be Swiftier approaches to the problem. E.g. when I see switch statements like this, I might tend to gravitate towards enum pattern.

Converting from Int to String Swift 2.2

Dears
I have this case where chatId is a property of type Int
let StringMessage = String(self.listingChat?.messages.last?.chatId)
When I debug I find that StringMessage is returning Optional(15) Which means it is unwrapped. But at the same time XCode does not allow me to put any bangs (!) to unwrap it. So I am stuck with Unwrapped Variable. I know its noob question but it I really cant get it. Your help is appreciated.
Thank you
It depends on what you want the default value to be.
Assuming you want the default value to be an empty string (""), You could create a function or a method to handle it.
func stringFromChatId(chatId: Int?) -> String {
if let chatId = chatId {
return String(chatId)
} else {
return ""
}
}
let stringMessage = stringFromChatId(self.listingChat?.messages.last?.chatId)
Or you could handle it with a closure.
let stringMessage = { $0 != nil ? String($0!) : "" }(self.listingChat?.messages.last?.chatId)
If you don't mind crashing if self.listingChat?.messages.last?.chatId is nil, then you should be able to directly unwrap it.
let StringMessage = String((self.listingChat?.messages.last?.chatId)!)
or with a closure
let stringMessage = { String($0!) }(self.listingChat?.messages.last?.chatId)
Update
Assuming chatId is an Int and not an Optional<Int> (AKA Int?) I missed the most obvious unwrap answer. Sorry, I was tired last night.
let StringMessage = String(self.listingChat!.messages.last!.chatId)
Force unwrap all the optionals along the way.
Optionals have a very nice method called map (unrelated to map for Arrays) which returns nil if the variable is nil, otherwise it calls a function on the (non-nil) value. Combined with a guard-let, you get very concise code. (I've changed the case of stringMessage because variables should begin with a lower-case letter.)
guard let stringMessage = self.listingChat?.messages.last?.chatId.map { String($0) } else {
// Do failure
}
// Success. stringMessage is of type String, not String?
I think:
let StringMessage = String(self.listingChat?.messages.last?.chatId)!

Swift String Interpolation displaying optional?

When i use the following code and have nameTextField be "Jeffrey" (or any other name)
#IBAction func helloWorldAction(nameTextField: UITextField) {
nameLabel.text = "Hello, \(nameTextField.text)"
}
nameLabel displays... Hello, Optional("Jeffrey")
But, when I change the previous code to include a "!" like this:
#IBAction func helloWorldAction(nameTextField: UITextField) {
nameLabel.text = "Hello, \(nameTextField.text!)"
}
The code works as expected and nameLabel displays.... Hello, Jeffrey
Why is the "!" required, in the video tutorial I used to create this simple program he did not use the "!" and the program worked as expected.
Another alternative is to use the null coalescing operator within the interpolated string for prettier text without the need for if let.
nameLabel.text = "Hello, \(nameTextField.text ?? "")"
It's less readable in this case, but if there were a lot of strings it might be preferable.
Optionals must be unwrapped. You must check for it or force unwrap as you do. Imagine the optional as a box where you put a value. Before you can access it, you need to put it out.
if let name = nameTextField.text {
nameLabel.text = "Hello, \(name)"
}
Here's a handy extension to unwrap Any? to String.
Set a default value for nil values.
extension String {
init(_ any: Any?) {
self = any == nil ? "My Default Value" : "\(any!)"
}
}
// Example
let count: Int? = 3
let index: Int? = nil
String(count)
String(index)
// Output
// 3
// My Default Value
You can also use optional map.
This is where I learned of how to use it.
Basically, map will take an optional and return a value if there's a value and return nil if there's no value.
It think this makes more sense in code, so here's the code I found useful:
func getUserAge() -> Int? {
return 38
}
let age = getUserAge()
let ageString = age.map { "Your age is \($0)" }
print(ageString ?? "We don't know your age.")
I guess this may not be super helpful in the case where you're passing in an optional string, (nil coalescing works just fine in that case), but this is super helpful for when you need to use some value that isn't a string.
It's even more useful when you want to run logic on the given value since map is a closure and you can use $0 multiple times.

"if let" statement executed despite value being nil

I have an "if let" statement that is being executed, despite the "let" part being nil.
if let leftInc : Double? = self.analysis.inputs[self.btnLeftIncisor.dictionaryKey!]! {
println(leftInc)
let valueString : String = formatter.stringFromNumber(NSNumber(double: leftInc!))!
self.leftIncisorTextField?.text = valueString
self.btnLeftIncisor.associatedLabel?.text = valueString
}
// self.analysis.inputs is a Dictionary<String, Double?>
The inputs dictionary holds information entered by the user - either a number, or nil if they haven't entered anything in the matching field yet.
Under the previous version of Swift, the code was written as this:
if let leftInc : Double? = self.analysis.inputs[self.btnLeftIncisor.dictionaryKey!]?? {
and worked correctly.
I saw a similar question here, but in that instance the problem seemed to be the result of using Any?, which is not the case here.
Swift 2.2
In your if let you define another optional, that's why nil is a legitimate case. if let is intended mainly to extract (maybe) non optional value from an optional.
You might try:
if let leftInc : Double = self.analysis.inputs[self.btnLeftIncisor.dictionaryKey!].flatMap ({$0}) {
// leftInc is not an optional in this scope
...
}
Anyway I'd consider to not do it as a one liner but take advantage of guard case. Just in order to enhance readability. And avoid bang operator (!).
The if-let is for unwrapping optionals. You are allowing nil values by setting the type to an optional Double.
The if statement should be:
if let leftInc = self.analysis.inputs[self.btnLeftIncisor.dictionaryKey!] as? Double{
...
}
This will attempt to get an object out of inputs, if that fails it returns nil and skips it. If it does return something it will attempt to convert it to a Double. If that fails it skips the if statement as well.
if inputs is a dictionary like [Something:Double] then you don't need the last as? Double as indexing the dictionary will return a Double?
I recommend reading the swift book on optional chaining.
You could break it down further -
if let optionalDouble = self.analysis.inputs[self.btnLeftIncisor.dictionaryKey!], leftInc = optionalDouble {
....
}
as your dictionary has optional values - this way of writing it might make it clearer what's going on
if let k = dict["someKey"]{}, dict["someKey"] will be an object of type Any
this can bypass a nill
So do a typecast to get it correct like if let k = dict["someKey"] as! String {}

How to check if a variable is nil

I have a variable
var a: [AnyObject? -> Void]
and I am adding data in to it by append method. Now I want to check if the variable is nil or not. I tried using [] but not working and also tried "", this also not working, can anyone tell what is the meaning of this variable and how to check if it is nil.
As far as I understand, var a is an Array of functions that take an optional Object of any type, and return void. So these functions's parameter IS optional, but the Array itself isn't : it cannot be nil, or it would be declared [AnyObject? -> Void]? , no?
EDIT : if, nevertheless, you declared this a as an optional (but WHY would you do that ?) - adding a ? - you check an optional existence with if let :
if let b = a {
// a not nil, do some stuff
} else {
// a is null
}
If you just want to check if the array is empty, use isEmpty method from Swift Array
Update: Xcode 7.3 Swift 2.2
If you want to check if a variable is nil you should use if let to unwrap if for you. There is no need to create a second var.
let str = "123"
var a = Int(str)
if let a = a {
print(a)
}
Or
if let a = Int(str) {
print(a)
}
In Swift, nil is not a pointer—it is the absence of a value of a certain type. Optionals of any type can be set to nil, not just object types.
So, You can check it with below code:
let possibleNumber = "123"
let convertedNumber = possibleNumber.toInt()
if convertedNumber != nil {
println("convertedNumber contains some integer value.")
}
// prints "convertedNumber contains some integer value."
Please refer this about nil for more information.
In Swift 3.0
if let imageURL = dictObj["list_image"] as? String {
print(imageURL)
}
You can use if let. if let is a special structure in Swift that allows you to check if an Optional holds a value, and in case it does – do something with the unwrapped value.
var a:Int=0
if let b=a{
println(a)
} else {
println("Value - nil")
}
But for Strings you can also use .isEmpty() If you have initialized it to "".
var str:String=""
if !str.isEmpty(){
println(str)
}
For me none of the above solutions worked when I was using an AVFoundation object.
I would get Type 'AVCaptureDeviceInput does not conform to protocol 'BooleanType' when I tried if (audioDeviceInput) and I would get Binary operator '!=' cannot be applied to operands of type 'AVCaptureDeviceInput' and 'nil'.
Solution in my situation
if (audioDeviceInput.isEqual(nil))
nil is a pointer like any other and can be referenced as such, which is why this works.