Why can't a get-only property requirement in a protocol be satisfied by a property which conforms?
Why does the following code produce an error?
protocol ProtocolA {
var someProperty: ProtocolB { get }
}
protocol ProtocolB {}
class ConformsToB: ProtocolB {}
class SomeClass: ProtocolA { // Type 'SomeClass' does not conform to protocol 'ProtocolA'
var someProperty: ConformsToB
init(someProperty: ConformsToB) {
self.someProperty = someProperty
}
}
The answer in this similar question makes sense. However, in my example, the property is get-only. Why shouldn't this work? Is it a shortcoming of Swift, or is there some reason this makes sense?
Solution 1:
There's no real reason why this shouldn't be possible, a read-only property requirement can be covariant, as returning a ConformsToB
instance from a property typed as ProtocolB
is perfectly legal.
Swift just currently doesn't support it. In order to do so, the compiler would have to generate a thunk between the protocol witness table and conforming implementation in order to perform the necessary type-conversion(s). For example, a ConformsToB
instance would need to be boxed in an existential container in order to be typed as ProtocolB
(and there's no way the caller can do this, as it might not know anything about the implementation being called).
But again, there's no reason why the compiler shouldn't be able to do this. There are multiple bug reports open over this, this one which is specific to read-only property requirements, and this general one, in which Slava Pestov, a member of the Swift team, says:
[...] we want protocol witnesses and method overrides in every case where a function conversion is allowed
So it definitely looks like something the Swift team are looking to implement in a future version of the language.
In the mean time however, as @BallpointBen says, one workaround is to use an associatedtype
:
protocol ProtocolA {
// allow the conforming type to satisfy this with a concrete type
// that conforms to ProtocolB.
associatedtype SomeProperty : ProtocolB
var someProperty: SomeProperty { get }
}
protocol ProtocolB {}
class ConformsToB: ProtocolB {}
class SomeClass: ProtocolA {
// implicitly satisfy the associatedtype with ConformsToB.
var someProperty: ConformsToB
init(someProperty: ConformsToB) {
self.someProperty = someProperty
}
}
But this is quite unsatisfactory, as it means that ProtocolA
is no longer usable as a type (because it has associatedtype
requirements). It also changes what the protocol says. Originally it said that someProperty
could return anything that conformed to ProtocolB
– now it says that an implementation of someProperty
deals with just one specific concrete type that conforms to ProtocolB
.
Another workaround is just to define a dummy property in order to satisfy the protocol requirement:
protocol ProtocolA {
var someProperty: ProtocolB { get }
}
protocol ProtocolB {}
class ConformsToB: ProtocolB {}
class SomeClass: ProtocolA {
// dummy property to satisfy protocol conformance.
var someProperty: ProtocolB {
return actualSomeProperty
}
// the *actual* implementation of someProperty.
var actualSomeProperty: ConformsToB
init(someProperty: ConformsToB) {
self.actualSomeProperty = someProperty
}
}
Here we're essentially writing the thunk for the compiler – but it's also not particularly nice as it adds a needless property to the API.
Solution 2:
In addition to Harmish's great response, if you want to keep using the same property name on both SomeClass
and ProtocolA
, you can do
protocol ProtocolB {}
protocol ProtocolA {
var _someProperty_protocolA: ProtocolB { get }
}
extension ProtocolA {
var someProperty: ProtocolB {
return _someProperty_protocolA
}
}
class ConformsToB: ProtocolB {}
class SomeClass: ProtocolA {
// the *actual* implementation of someProperty.
var _someProperty: ConformsToB
var someProperty: ConformsToB {
// You can't expose someProperty directly as
// (SomeClass() as ProtocolA).someProperty would
// point to the getter in ProtocolA and loop
return _someProperty
}
// dummy property to satisfy protocol conformance.
var _someProperty_protocolA: ProtocolB {
return someProperty
}
init(someProperty: ConformsToB) {
self.someProperty = someProperty
}
}
let foo = SomeClass(someProperty: ConformsToB())
// foo.someProperty is a ConformsToB
// (foo as ProtocolA).someProperty is a ProtocolB
This can be useful when you are conforming to another protocol ProtocolA2
that would originally also have constraint on someProperty
as well, or when you want to hide your hack around swift limitations.
I'm now curious to know why Swift is not doing this for me directly.