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Swift Cookbook

You're reading from   Swift Cookbook Over 60 proven recipes for developing better iOS applications with Swift 5.3

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839211195
Length 500 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (3):
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Keith Moon Keith Moon
Author Profile Icon Keith Moon
Keith Moon
Keith D. Moon Keith D. Moon
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Keith D. Moon
Chris Barker Chris Barker
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Chris Barker
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Swift Building Blocks 2. Mastering the Building Blocks FREE CHAPTER 3. Data Wrangling with Swift Control Flow 4. Generics, Operators, and Nested Types 5. Beyond the Standard Library 6. Building iOS Apps with Swift 7. Swift Playgrounds 8. Server-Side Swift 9. Performance and Responsiveness in Swift 10. SwiftUI and Combine Framework 11. Using CoreML and Vision in Swift 12. About Packt 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Associated values

Our string-based enum seems perfect for our title information, except that we have a case called other. If the person has a title that we hadn't considered when defining the enum, we can choose other, but that doesn't capture what the other title is. In our model, we would need to define another property to hold the value given for other, but that splits our definition of title over two separate properties, which could cause an unintended combination of values.

Swift enums have a solution for this situation, associated values. We can choose to associate a value with each enum case, allowing us to bind a non-optional string to our other case.

Let's rewrite our Title enum to use an associated value:

enum Title { 
case mr
case mrs
case mister
case miss
case dr
case prof
case other(String)
}

We have defined the other case to have an associated value by putting the value's type in brackets after the case...

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