I like it very much. > On 24 Mar 2016, at 06:13, Chris Lattner via swift-evolution > <[email protected]> wrote: > > How about we continue this trend, and follow other existing Swift keywords > that merge two lowercase words (associatedtype, typealias, etc), and use: > > public > moduleprivate > fileprivate > private > > The advantages, as I see them are: > 1) We keep public and private meaning the “right” and “obvious” things. > 2) The declmodifiers “read” correctly. > 3) The unusual ones (moduleprivate and fileprivate) don’t use the awkward > parenthesized keyword approach. > 4) The unusual ones would be “googable”. > 5) Support for named submodules could be “dropped in” by putting the > submodule name/path in parens: private(foo.bar.baz) or > moduleprivate(foo.bar). Putting an identifier in the parens is much more > natural than putting keywords in parens. > > What do you all think?
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