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Genéricos

Generics

Write code that works for multiple types and specify requirements for those types.

Generic code enables you to write flexible, reusable functions and types that can work with any type, subject to requirements that you define. You can write code that avoids duplication and expresses its intent in a clear, abstracted manner.

Generics are one of the most powerful features of Swift, and much of the Swift standard library is built with generic code. In fact, you've been using generics throughout the Language Guide, even if you didn't realize it. For example, Swift's Array and Dictionary types are both generic collections. You can create an array that holds Int values, or an array that holds String values, or indeed an array for any other type that can be created in Swift. Similarly, you can create a dictionary to store values of any specified type, and there are no limitations on what that type can be.

The Problem That Generics Solve

Here's a standard, nongeneric function called swapTwoInts(_:_:), which swaps two Int values:

func swapTwoInts(_ a: inout Int, _ b: inout Int) {
    let temporaryA = a
 
    a = b
    b = temporaryA
}

This function makes use of in-out parameters to swap the values of a and b, as described in In-Out Parameters.

The swapTwoInts(_:_:) function swaps the original value of b into a, and the original value of a into b. You can call this function to swap the values in two Int variables:

var someInt = 3
var anotherInt = 107
 
swapTwoInts(&someInt, &anotherInt)
 
print("someInt is now \(someInt), and anotherInt is now \(anotherInt)")
// Prints "someInt is now 107, and anotherInt is now 3"

The swapTwoInts(_:_:) function is useful, but it can only be used with Int values. If you want to swap two String values, or two Double values, you have to write more functions, such as the swapTwoStrings(_:_:) and swapTwoDoubles(_:_:) functions shown below:

func swapTwoStrings(_ a: inout String, _ b: inout String) {
    let temporaryA = a
 
    a = b
    b = temporaryA
}
 
func swapTwoDoubles(_ a: inout Double, _ b: inout Double) {
    let temporaryA = a
 
    a = b
    b = temporaryA
}

You may have noticed that the bodies of the swapTwoInts(_:_:), swapTwoStrings(_:_:), and swapTwoDoubles(_:_:) functions are identical. The only difference is the type of the values that they accept (Int, String, and Double).

It's more useful, and considerably more flexible, to write a single function that swaps two values of any type. Generic code enables you to write such a function. (A generic version of these functions is defined below.)

Generic Functions

Generic functions can work with any type. Here's a generic version of the swapTwoInts(_:_:) function from above, called swapTwoValues(_:_:):

func swapTwoValues<T>(_ a: inout T, _ b: inout T) {
    let temporaryA = a
 
    a = b
    b = temporaryA
}

The body of the swapTwoValues(_:_:) function is identical to the body of the swapTwoInts(_:_:) function. However, the first line of swapTwoValues(_:_:) is slightly different from swapTwoInts(_:_:). Here's how the first lines compare:

func swapTwoInts(_ a: inout Int, _ b: inout Int)
func swapTwoValues<T>(_ a: inout T, _ b: inout T)

The generic version of the function uses a placeholder type name (called T, in this case) instead of an actual type name (such as Int, String, or Double). The placeholder type name doesn't say anything about what T must be, but it does say that both a and b must be of the same type T, whatever T represents. The actual type to use in place of T is determined each time the swapTwoValues(_:_:) function is called.

The other difference between a generic function and a nongeneric function is that the generic function's name (swapTwoValues(_:_:)) is followed by the placeholder type name (T) inside angle brackets (<T>). The brackets tell Swift that T is a placeholder type name within the swapTwoValues(_:_:) function definition. Because T is a placeholder, Swift doesn't look for an actual type called T.

The swapTwoValues(_:_:) function can now be called in the same way as swapTwoInts(_:_:), except that it can be passed two values of any type, as long as both of those values are of the same type as each other. Each time swapTwoValues(_:_:) is called, the type to use for T is inferred from the types of values passed to the function.

In the two examples below, T is inferred to be Int and String respectively:

var someInt = 3
var anotherInt = 107
 
swapTwoValues(&someInt, &anotherInt)
// someInt is now 107, and anotherInt is now 3
 
var someString = "hello"
var anotherString = "world"
 
swapTwoValues(&someString, &anotherString)
// someString is now "world", and anotherString is now "hello"
 

Type Parameters

In the swapTwoValues(_:_:) example above, the placeholder type T is an example of a type parameter. Type parameters specify and name a placeholder type, and are written immediately after the function's name, between a pair of matching angle brackets (such as <T>).

Once you specify a type parameter, you can use it to define the type of a function's parameters (such as the a and b parameters of the swapTwoValues(_:_:) function), or as the function's return type, or as a type annotation within the body of the function. In each case, the type parameter is replaced with an actual type whenever the function is called. (In the swapTwoValues(_:_:) example above, T was replaced with Int the first time the function was called, and was replaced with String the second time it was called.)

You can provide more than one type parameter by writing multiple type parameter names within the angle brackets, separated by commas.

Naming Type Parameters

In most cases, type parameters have descriptive names, such as Key and Value in Dictionary<Key, Value> and Element in Array<Element>, which tells the reader about the relationship between the type parameter and the generic type or function it's used in. However, when there isn't a meaningful relationship between them, it's traditional to name them using single letters such as T, U, and V, such as T in the swapTwoValues(_:_:) function above.

Generic Types

In addition to generic functions, Swift enables you to define your own generic types. These are custom classes, structures, and enumerations that can work with any type, in a similar way to Array and Dictionary.

This section shows you how to write a generic collection type called Stack. A stack is an ordered set of values, similar to an array, but with a more restricted set of operations than Swift's Array type. An array allows new items to be inserted and removed at any location in the array. A stack, however, allows new items to be appended only to the end of the collection (known as pushing a new value on to the stack). Similarly, a stack allows items to be removed only from the end of the collection (known as popping a value off the stack).

The illustration below shows the push and pop behavior for a stack:

Illustration of push and pop behavior on a stack
  1. There are currently three values on the stack.
  2. A fourth value is pushed onto the top of the stack.
  3. The stack now holds four values, with the most recent one at the top.
  4. The top item in the stack is popped.
  5. After popping a value, the stack once again holds three values.

Here's how to write a nongeneric version of a stack, in this case for a stack of Int values:

struct IntStack {
    var items: [Int] = []
 
    mutating func push(_ item: Int) {
        items.append(item)
    }
 
    mutating func pop() -> Int {
        return items.removeLast()
    }
}

This structure uses an Array property called items to store the values in the stack. Stack provides two methods, push and pop, to push and pop values on and off the stack. These methods are marked as mutating, because they need to modify (or mutate) the structure's items array.

The IntStack type shown above can only be used with Int values, however. It would be much more useful to define a generic Stack class, that can manage a stack of any type of value.

Here's a generic version of the same code:

struct Stack<Element> {
    var items: [Element] = []
 
    mutating func push(_ item: Element) {
        items.append(item)
    }
 
    mutating func pop() -> Element {
        return items.removeLast()
    }
}

Note how the generic version of Stack is essentially the same as the nongeneric version, but with a type parameter called Element instead of an actual type of Int. This type parameter is written within a pair of angle brackets (<Element>) immediately after the structure's name.

Element defines a placeholder name for a type to be provided later. This future type can be referred to as Element anywhere within the structure's definition. In this case, Element is used as a placeholder in three places:

  • To create a property called items, which is initialized with an empty array of values of type Element
  • To specify that the push(_:) method has a single parameter called item, which must be of type Element
  • To specify that the value returned by the pop() method will be a value of type Element

Because it's a generic type, Stack can be used to create a stack of any valid type in Swift, in a similar manner to Array and Dictionary.

You create a new Stack instance by writing the type to be stored in the stack within angle brackets. For example, to create a new stack of strings, you write Stack<String>():

var stackOfStrings = Stack<String>()
 
stackOfStrings.push("uno")
stackOfStrings.push("dos")
stackOfStrings.push("tres")
stackOfStrings.push("cuatro")
// the stack now contains 4 strings

Here's how stackOfStrings looks after pushing these four values on to the stack:

Illustration of push and pop behavior on a stack

Popping a value from the stack removes and returns the top value, "cuatro":

let fromTheTop = stackOfStrings.pop()
// fromTheTop is equal to "cuatro", and the stack now contains 3 strings

Here's how the stack looks after popping its top value:

Illustration of push and pop behavior on a stack

Extending a Generic Type

When you extend a generic type, you don't provide a type parameter list as part of the extension's definition. Instead, the type parameter list from the original type definition is available within the body of the extension, and the original type parameter names are used to refer to the type parameters from the original definition.

The following example extends the generic Stack type to add a read-only computed property called topItem, which returns the top item on the stack without popping it from the stack:

extension Stack {
    var topItem: Element? {
        return items.isEmpty ? nil : items[items.count - 1]
    }
}

The topItem property returns an optional value of type Element. If the stack is empty, topItem returns nil; if the stack isn't empty, topItem returns the final item in the items array.

Note that this extension doesn't define a type parameter list. Instead, the Stack type's existing type parameter name, Element, is used within the extension to indicate the optional type of the topItem computed property.

The topItem computed property can now be used with any Stack instance to access and query its top item without removing it.

if let topItem = stackOfStrings.topItem {
    print("The top item on the stack is \(topItem).")
}
// Prints "The top item on the stack is tres."

Extensions of a generic type can also include requirements that instances of the extended type must satisfy in order to gain the new functionality, as discussed in Extensions with a Generic Where Clause below.

Type Constraints

The swapTwoValues(_:_:) function and the Stack type can work with any type. However, it's sometimes useful to enforce certain type constraints on the types that can be used with generic functions and generic types. Type constraints specify that a type parameter must inherit from a specific class, or conform to a particular protocol or protocol composition.

For example, Swift's Dictionary type places a limitation on the types that can be used as keys for a dictionary. As described in Dictionaries, the type of a dictionary's keys must be hashable. That is, it must provide a way to make itself uniquely representable. Dictionary needs its keys to be hashable so that it can check whether it already contains a value for a particular key. Without this requirement, Dictionary couldn't tell whether it should insert or replace a value for a particular key, nor would it be able to find a value for a given key that's already in the dictionary.

This requirement is enforced by a type constraint on the key type for Dictionary, which specifies that the key type must conform to the Hashable protocol, a special protocol defined in the Swift standard library. All of Swift's basic types (such as String, Int, Double, and Bool) are hashable by default. For information about making your own custom types conform to the Hashable protocol, see Conforming to the Hashable Protocol (opens in a new tab).

You can define your own type constraints when creating custom generic types, and these constraints provide much of the power of generic programming. Abstract concepts like characterize types in terms of their conceptual characteristics, rather than their concrete type.

Type Constraint Syntax

You write type constraints by placing a single class or protocol constraint after a type parameter's name, separated by a colon, as part of the type parameter list. The basic syntax for type constraints on a generic function is shown below (although the syntax is the same for generic types):

func someFunction<T: SomeClass, U: SomeProtocol>(someT: T, someU: U) {
    // function body goes here
}

The hypothetical function above has two type parameters. The first type parameter, T, has a type constraint that requires T to be a subclass of SomeClass. The second type parameter, U, has a type constraint that requires U to conform to the protocol SomeProtocol.

Type Constraints in Action

Here's a nongeneric function called findIndex(ofString:in:), which is given a String value to find and an array of String values within which to find it. The findIndex(ofString:in:) function returns an optional Int value, which will be the index of the first matching string in the array if it's found, or nil if the string can't be found:

func findIndex(ofString valueToFind: String, in array: [String]) -> Int? {
    for (index, value) in array.enumerated() {
        if value == valueToFind {
            return index
        }
    }
 
    return nil
}

The findIndex(ofString:in:) function can be used to find a string value in an array of strings:

let strings = ["cat", "dog", "llama", "parakeet", "terrapin"]
 
if let foundIndex = findIndex(ofString: "llama", in: strings) {
    print("The index of llama is \(foundIndex)")
}
// Prints "The index of llama is 2"

The principle of finding the index of a value in an array isn't useful only for strings, however. You can write the same functionality as a generic function by replacing any mention of strings with values of some type T instead.

Here's how you might expect a generic version of findIndex(ofString:in:), called findIndex(of:in:), to be written. Note that the return type of this function is still Int?, because the function returns an optional index number, not an optional value from the array. Be warned, though—this function doesn't compile, for reasons explained after the example:

func findIndex<T>(of valueToFind: T, in array:[T]) -> Int? {
    for (index, value) in array.enumerated() {
        if value == valueToFind {
            return index
        }
    }
 
    return nil
}

This function doesn't compile as written above. The problem lies with the equality check, “if value == valueToFind”. Not every type in Swift can be compared with the equal to operator (==). If you create your own class or structure to represent a complex data model, for example, then the meaning of “equal to” for that class or structure isn't something that Swift can guess for you. Because of this, it isn't possible to guarantee that this code will work for every possible type T, and an appropriate error is reported when you try to compile the code.

All is not lost, however. The Swift standard library defines a protocol called Equatable, which requires any conforming type to implement the equal to operator (==) and the not equal to operator (!=) to compare any two values of that type. All of Swift's standard types automatically support the Equatable protocol.

Any type that's Equatable can be used safely with the findIndex(of:in:) function, because it's guaranteed to support the equal to operator. To express this fact, you write a type constraint of Equatable as part of the type parameter's definition when you define the function:

func findIndex<T: Equatable>(of valueToFind: T, in array:[T]) -> Int? {
    for (index, value) in array.enumerated() {
        if value == valueToFind {
            return index
        }
    }
 
    return nil
}

The single type parameter for findIndex(of:in:) is written as T: Equatable, which means “any type T that conforms to the Equatable protocol.”

The findIndex(of:in:) function now compiles successfully and can be used with any type that's Equatable, such as Double or String:

let doubleIndex = findIndex(of: 9.3, in: [3.14159, 0.1, 0.25])
// doubleIndex is an optional Int with no value, because 9.3 isn't in the array
let stringIndex = findIndex(of: "Andrea", in: ["Mike", "Malcolm", "Andrea"])
// stringIndex is an optional Int containing a value of 2

Associated Types

When defining a protocol, it's sometimes useful to declare one or more associated types as part of the protocol's definition. An associated type gives a placeholder name to a type that's used as part of the protocol. The actual type to use for that associated type isn't specified until the protocol is adopted. Associated types are specified with the associatedtype keyword.

Associated Types in Action

Here's an example of a protocol called Container, which declares an associated type called Item:

protocol Container {
    associatedtype Item
 
    mutating func append(_ item: Item)
 
    var count: Int { get }
 
    subscript(i: Int) -> Item { get }
}

The Container protocol defines three required capabilities that any container must provide:

  • It must be possible to add a new item to the container with an append(_:) method.
  • It must be possible to access a count of the items in the container through a count property that returns an Int value.
  • It must be possible to retrieve each item in the container with a subscript that takes an Int index value.

This protocol doesn't specify how the items in the container should be stored or what type they're allowed to be. The protocol only specifies the three bits of functionality that any type must provide in order to be considered a Container. A conforming type can provide additional functionality, as long as it satisfies these three requirements.

Any type that conforms to the Container protocol must be able to specify the type of values it stores. Specifically, it must ensure that only items of the right type are added to the container, and it must be clear about the type of the items returned by its subscript.

To define these requirements, the Container protocol needs a way to refer to the type of the elements that a container will hold, without knowing what that type is for a specific container. The Container protocol needs to specify that any value passed to the append(_:) method must have the same type as the container's element type, and that the value returned by the container's subscript will be of the same type as the container's element type.

To achieve this, the Container protocol declares an associated type called Item, written as associatedtype Item. The protocol doesn't define what Item is—that information is left for any conforming type to provide. Nonetheless, the Item alias provides a way to refer to the type of the items in a Container, and to define a type for use with the append(_:) method and subscript, to ensure that the expected behavior of any Container is enforced.

Here's a version of the nongeneric IntStack type from Generic Types above, adapted to conform to the Container protocol:

struct IntStack: Container {
    // original IntStack implementation
    var items: [Int] = []
 
    mutating func push(_ item: Int) {
        items.append(item)
    }
 
    mutating func pop() -> Int {
        return items.removeLast()
    }
 
    // conformance to the Container protocol
    typealias Item = Int
 
    mutating func append(_ item: Int) {
        self.push(item)
    }
 
    var count: Int {
        return items.count
    }
 
    subscript(i: Int) -> Int {
        return items[i]
    }
}

The IntStack type implements all three of the Container protocol's requirements, and in each case wraps part of the IntStack type's existing functionality to satisfy these requirements.

Moreover, IntStack specifies that for this implementation of Container, the appropriate Item to use is a type of Int. The definition of typealias Item = Int turns the abstract type of Item into a concrete type of Int for this implementation of the Container protocol.

Thanks to Swift's type inference, you don't actually need to declare a concrete Item of Int as part of the definition of IntStack. Because IntStack conforms to all of the requirements of the Container protocol, Swift can infer the appropriate Item to use, simply by looking at the type of the append(_:) method's item parameter and the return type of the subscript. Indeed, if you delete the typealias Item = Int line from the code above, everything still works, because it's clear what type should be used for Item.

You can also make the generic Stack type conform to the Container protocol:

struct Stack<Element>: Container {
    // original Stack<Element> implementation
    var items: [Element] = []
 
    mutating func push(_ item: Element) {
        items.append(item)
    }
 
    mutating func pop() -> Element {
        return items.removeLast()
    }
 
    // conformance to the Container protocol
    mutating func append(_ item: Element) {
        self.push(item)
    }
 
    var count: Int {
        return items.count
    }
 
    subscript(i: Int) -> Element {
        return items[i]
    }
}

This time, the type parameter Element is used as the type of the append(_:) method's item parameter and the return type of the subscript. Swift can therefore infer that Element is the appropriate type to use as the Item for this particular container.

Extending an Existing Type to Specify an Associated Type

You can extend an existing type to add conformance to a protocol, as described in Adding Protocol Conformance with an Extension. This includes a protocol with an associated type.

Swift's Array type already provides an append(_:) method, a count property, and a subscript with an Int index to retrieve its elements. These three capabilities match the requirements of the Container protocol. This means that you can extend Array to conform to the Container protocol simply by declaring that Array adopts the protocol. You do this with an empty extension, as described in Declaring Protocol Adoption with an Extension:

extension Array: Container {}

Array's existing append(_:) method and subscript enable Swift to infer the appropriate type to use for Item, just as for the generic Stack type above. After defining this extension, you can use any Array as a Container.

Adding Constraints to an Associated Type

You can add type constraints to an associated type in a protocol to require that conforming types satisfy those constraints. For example, the following code defines a version of Container that requires the items in the container to be equatable.

protocol Container {
    associatedtype Item: Equatable
 
    mutating func append(_ item: Item)
 
    var count: Int { get }
 
    subscript(i: Int) -> Item { get }
}

To conform to this version of Container, the container's Item type has to conform to the Equatable protocol.

Using a Protocol in Its Associated Type's Constraints

A protocol can appear as part of its own requirements. For example, here's a protocol that refines the Container protocol, adding the requirement of a suffix(_:) method. The suffix(_:) method returns a given number of elements from the end of the container, storing them in an instance of the Suffix type.

protocol SuffixableContainer: Container {
    associatedtype Suffix: SuffixableContainer where Suffix.Item == Item
 
    func suffix(_ size: Int) -> Suffix
}

In this protocol, Suffix is an associated type, like the Item type in the Container example above. Suffix has two constraints: It must conform to the SuffixableContainer protocol (the protocol currently being defined), and its Item type must be the same as the container's Item type. The constraint on Item is a generic where clause, which is discussed in Associated Types with a Generic Where Clause below.

Here's an extension of the Stack type from Generic Types above that adds conformance to the SuffixableContainer protocol:

extension Stack: SuffixableContainer {
    func suffix(_ size: Int) -> Stack {
        var result = Stack()
 
        for index in (count-size)..<count {
            result.append(self[index])
        }
 
        return result
    }
    // Inferred that Suffix is Stack.
}
 
var stackOfInts = Stack<Int>()
 
stackOfInts.append(10)
stackOfInts.append(20)
stackOfInts.append(30)
 
let suffix = stackOfInts.suffix(2)
// suffix contains 20 and 30

In the example above, the Suffix associated type for Stack is also Stack, so the suffix operation on Stack returns another Stack. Alternatively, a type that conforms to SuffixableContainer can have a Suffix type that's different from itself—meaning the suffix operation can return a different type. For example, here's an extension to the nongeneric IntStack type that adds SuffixableContainer conformance, using Stack<Int> as its suffix type instead of IntStack:

extension IntStack: SuffixableContainer {
    func suffix(_ size: Int) -> Stack<Int> {
        var result = Stack<Int>()
 
        for index in (count-size)..<count {
            result.append(self[index])
        }
 
        return result
    }
    // Inferred that Suffix is Stack<Int>.
}

Generic where Clauses

Type constraints, as described in Type Constraints, enable you to define requirements on the type parameters associated with a generic function, subscript, or type.

It can also be useful to define requirements for associated types. You do this by defining a generic where clause. A generic where clause enables you to require that an associated type must conform to a certain protocol, or that certain type parameters and associated types must be the same. A generic where clause starts with the where keyword, followed by constraints for associated types or equality relationships between types and associated types. You write a generic where clause right before the opening curly brace of a type or function's body.

The example below defines a generic function called allItemsMatch, which checks to see if two Container instances contain the same items in the same order. The function returns a Boolean value of true if all items match and a value of false if they don't.

The two containers to be checked don't have to be the same type of container (although they can be), but they do have to hold the same type of items. This requirement is expressed through a combination of type constraints and a generic where clause:

func allItemsMatch<C1: Container, C2: Container>
        (_ someContainer: C1, _ anotherContainer: C2) -> Bool
        where C1.Item == C2.Item, C1.Item: Equatable {
 
    // Check that both containers contain the same number of items.
    if someContainer.count != anotherContainer.count {
        return false
    }
 
    // Check each pair of items to see if they're equivalent.
    for i in 0..<someContainer.count {
 
        if someContainer[i] != anotherContainer[i] {
            return false
        }
 
    }
 
    // All items match, so return true.
    return true
}

This function takes two arguments called someContainer and anotherContainer. The someContainer argument is of type C1, and the anotherContainer argument is of type C2. Both C1 and C2 are type parameters for two container types to be determined when the function is called.

The following requirements are placed on the function's two type parameters:

  • C1 must conform to the Container protocol (written as C1: Container).
  • C2 must also conform to the Container protocol (written as C2: Container).
  • The Item for C1 must be the same as the Item for C2 (written as C1.Item == C2.Item).
  • The Item for C1 must conform to the Equatable protocol (written as C1.Item: Equatable).

The first and second requirements are defined in the function's type parameter list, and the third and fourth requirements are defined in the function's generic where clause.

These requirements mean:

  • someContainer is a container of type C1.
  • anotherContainer is a container of type C2.
  • someContainer and anotherContainer contain the same type of items.
  • The items in someContainer can be checked with the not equal operator (!=) to see if they're different from each other.

The third and fourth requirements combine to mean that the items in anotherContainer can also be checked with the != operator, because they're exactly the same type as the items in someContainer.

These requirements enable the allItemsMatch(_:_:) function to compare the two containers, even if they're of a different container type.

The allItemsMatch(_:_:) function starts by checking that both containers contain the same number of items. If they contain a different number of items, there's no way that they can match, and the function returns false.

After making this check, the function iterates over all of the items in someContainer with a for-in loop and the half-open range operator (..<). For each item, the function checks whether the item from someContainer isn't equal to the corresponding item in anotherContainer. If the two items aren't equal, then the two containers don't match, and the function returns false.

If the loop finishes without finding a mismatch, the two containers match, and the function returns true.

Here's how the allItemsMatch(_:_:) function looks in action:

var stackOfStrings = Stack<String>()
 
stackOfStrings.push("uno")
stackOfStrings.push("dos")
stackOfStrings.push("tres")
 
var arrayOfStrings = ["uno", "dos", "tres"]
 
if allItemsMatch(stackOfStrings, arrayOfStrings) {
    print("All items match.")
} else {
    print("Not all items match.")
}
// Prints "All items match."

The example above creates a Stack instance to store String values, and pushes three strings onto the stack. The example also creates an Array instance initialized with an array literal containing the same three strings as the stack. Even though the stack and the array are of a different type, they both conform to the Container protocol, and both contain the same type of values. You can therefore call the allItemsMatch(_:_:) function with these two containers as its arguments. In the example above, the allItemsMatch(_:_:) function correctly reports that all of the items in the two containers match.

Extensions with a Generic where Clause

You can also use a generic where clause as part of an extension. The example below extends the generic Stack structure from the previous examples to add an isTop(_:) method.

extension Stack where Element: Equatable {
    func isTop(_ item: Element) -> Bool {
        guard let topItem = items.last else {
            return false
        }
 
        return topItem == item
    }
}

This new isTop(_:) method first checks that the stack isn't empty, and then compares the given item against the stack's topmost item. If you tried to do this without a generic where clause, you would have a problem: The implementation of isTop(_:) uses the == operator, but the definition of Stack doesn't require its items to be equatable, so using the == operator results in a compile-time error. Using a generic where clause lets you add a new requirement to the extension, so that the extension adds the isTop(_:) method only when the items in the stack are equatable.

Here's how the isTop(_:) method looks in action:

if stackOfStrings.isTop("tres") {
    print("Top element is tres.")
} else {
    print("Top element is something else.")
}
// Prints "Top element is tres."

If you try to call the isTop(_:) method on a stack whose elements aren't equatable, you'll get a compile-time error.

struct NotEquatable { }
 
var notEquatableStack = Stack<NotEquatable>()
let notEquatableValue = NotEquatable()
 
notEquatableStack.push(notEquatableValue)
notEquatableStack.isTop(notEquatableValue)  // Error

You can use a generic where clause with extensions to a protocol. The example below extends the Container protocol from the previous examples to add a startsWith(_:) method.

extension Container where Item: Equatable {
    func startsWith(_ item: Item) -> Bool {
        return count >= 1 && self[0] == item
    }
}

The startsWith(_:) method first makes sure that the container has at least one item, and then it checks whether the first item in the container matches the given item. This new startsWith(_:) method can be used with any type that conforms to the Container protocol, including the stacks and arrays used above, as long as the container's items are equatable.

if [9, 9, 9].startsWith(42) {
    print("Starts with 42.")
} else {
    print("Starts with something else.")
}
// Prints "Starts with something else."

The generic where clause in the example above requires Item to conform to a protocol, but you can also write a generic where clauses that require Item to be a specific type. For example:

extension Container where Item == Double {
    func average() -> Double {
        var sum = 0.0
 
        for index in 0..<count {
            sum += self[index]
        }
 
        return sum / Double(count)
    }
}
 
print([1260.0, 1200.0, 98.6, 37.0].average())
// Prints "648.9"

This example adds an average() method to containers whose Item type is Double. It iterates over the items in the container to add them up, and divides by the container's count to compute the average. It explicitly converts the count from Int to Double to be able to do floating-point division.

You can include multiple requirements in a generic where clause that's part of an extension, just like you can for a generic where clause that you write elsewhere. Separate each requirement in the list with a comma.

Contextual where Clauses

You can write a generic where clause as part of a declaration that doesn't have its own generic type constraints, when you're already working in the context of generic types. For example, you can write a generic where clause on a subscript of a generic type or on a method in an extension to a generic type. The Container structure is generic, and the where clauses in the example below specify what type constraints have to be satisfied to make these new methods available on a container.

extension Container {
    func average() -> Double where Item == Int {
        var sum = 0.0
 
        for index in 0..<count {
            sum += Double(self[index])
        }
 
        return sum / Double(count)
    }
 
    func endsWith(_ item: Item) -> Bool where Item: Equatable {
        return count >= 1 && self[count-1] == item
    }
}
 
let numbers = [1260, 1200, 98, 37]
 
print(numbers.average())
// Prints "648.75"
print(numbers.endsWith(37))
// Prints "true"

This example adds an average() method to Container when the items are integers, and it adds an endsWith(_:) method when the items are equatable. Both functions include a generic where clause that adds type constraints to the generic Item type parameter from the original declaration of Container.

If you want to write this code without using contextual where clauses, you write two extensions, one for each generic where clause. The example above and the example below have the same behavior.

extension Container where Item == Int {
    func average() -> Double {
        var sum = 0.0
 
        for index in 0..<count {
            sum += Double(self[index])
        }
 
        return sum / Double(count)
    }
}
 
extension Container where Item: Equatable {
    func endsWith(_ item: Item) -> Bool {
        return count >= 1 && self[count-1] == item
    }
}

In the version of this example that uses contextual where clauses, the implementation of average() and endsWith(_:) are both in the same extension because each method's generic where clause states the requirements that need to be satisfied to make that method available. Moving those requirements to the extensions' generic where clauses makes the methods available in the same situations, but requires one extension per requirement.

Associated Types with a Generic where Clause

You can include a generic where clause on an associated type. For example, suppose you want to make a version of Container that includes an iterator, like what the Sequence protocol uses in the standard library. Here's how you write that:

protocol Container {
    associatedtype Item
 
    mutating func append(_ item: Item)
 
    var count: Int { get }
 
    subscript(i: Int) -> Item { get }
 
    associatedtype Iterator: IteratorProtocol where Iterator.Element == Item
 
    func makeIterator() -> Iterator
}

The generic where clause on Iterator requires that the iterator must traverse over elements of the same item type as the container's items, regardless of the iterator's type. The makeIterator() function provides access to a container's iterator.

For a protocol that inherits from another protocol, you add a constraint to an inherited associated type by including the generic where clause in the protocol declaration. For example, the following code declares a ComparableContainer protocol that requires Item to conform to Comparable:

protocol ComparableContainer: Container where Item: Comparable {}

Generic Subscripts

Subscripts can be generic, and they can include generic where clauses. You write the placeholder type name inside angle brackets after subscript, and you write a generic where clause right before the opening curly brace of the subscript's body. For example:

extension Container {
    subscript<Indices: Sequence>(indices: Indices) -> [Item]
            where Indices.Iterator.Element == Int {
        var result: [Item] = []
 
        for index in indices {
            result.append(self[index])
        }
 
        return result
    }
}

This extension to the Container protocol adds a subscript that takes a sequence of indices and returns an array containing the items at each given index. This generic subscript is constrained as follows:

  • The generic parameter Indices in angle brackets has to be a type that conforms to the Sequence protocol from the standard library.
  • The subscript takes a single parameter, indices, which is an instance of that Indices type.
  • The generic where clause requires that the iterator for the sequence must traverse over elements of type Int. This ensures that the indices in the sequence are the same type as the indices used for a container.

Taken together, these constraints mean that the value passed for the indices parameter is a sequence of integers.