on Wed May 04 2016, Colin Barrett <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Swift numeric types all currently have a family of conversion > initializers. In many use cases they leave a lot to be > desired. Initializing an integer type with a floating point value will > truncate any fractional portion of the number. Initializing with an > out-of-range value traps. > > Have you considered whether it makes sense to keep these around? Maybe > the failable ones should be the default, and give the other ones a > more descriptive 1st argument label. That would overturn Swift's fundamental programming model for numerics, which is based on the fact that, to a first approximation, everybody codes, **and wants to continue coding** as though their Int is really an unbounded integer and their Double is an unbounded real number with unlimited precision. We very intentionally make the limitations of our numeric types observable, but also not in-your-face for basic operations. If we were to go this route, we would also make you unwrap the result of x + 1 because it might overflow. -- Dave _______________________________________________ swift-evolution mailing list [email protected] https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution
