Morrowless
Morrowless

Reputation: 6958

Nonfailable enum initializer with default value

Is there a way to define an enum, when initialized from rawValue will default to some value instead of failing? Useful in cases where the value may be unexpected (i.e. server API errors)

Upvotes: 6

Views: 1634

Answers (1)

John Difool
John Difool

Reputation: 5732

You mean something like that?

enum ErrorCode: Int {
    case NoErr = 0, Err1, Err2, LastErr, DefaultErr

    init(value: Int) {
        if (value > LastErr.rawValue) {
            self = .DefaultErr
        } else {
            self = ErrorCode(rawValue: value)!
        }
    }
}

let error: ErrorCode = .LastErr
let anotherError: ErrorCode = ErrorCode(value: 99)

Here is another variation:

enum ErrorCode: Int {
    case NoErr = 0, Err1, Err2, LastErr

    init?(value: Int) {
        if (value > 3) {
            return nil
        } else {
            self = ErrorCode(rawValue: value)!
        }

    }
}

let error: ErrorCode = .LastErr
let anotherError: ErrorCode? = ErrorCode(value: 99)

which is equivalent to :

enum ErrorCode: Int {
    case NoErr = 0, Err1, Err2, LastErr
}

let anotherError: ErrorCode? = ErrorCode(rawValue: 99)

because as Apple doc is stating:

NOTE

The raw value initializer is a failable initializer, because not every raw value will return an enumeration member. For more information, see Failable Initializers.

But in general, if you want to use enum with rawvalue, you should expect an optional and treat the nil returned value as a default error case outside the enum definition. That would be my recommendation.

Upvotes: 5

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