Here we go again :) I’m obviously supporting this proposal, like the first one we had tried to pass at the beginning of the swift evolution mailing list, even if in those times, we try to completely replace the fallthrough keyword with a new one.
I continue to have a draft of that proposal on gist https://gist.github.com/JGiola/f735212789bf2f697847 Instead of continue we put out a fallto keyword that must explicit state the case where we want to go at the end of that case, but this solution is more clean and simple to reasoning with and use a well stated keyword used in others flow statements. - Jacopo > On 11 Jul 2016, at 04:27, Erica Sadun via swift-evolution > <[email protected]> wrote: > > A quick pitch to introduce `continue` to switch statements. This would be > additive and could not be considered for Swift 3. > > -- E > > Pitch: Introduce continue to Switch Statements > > > <https://gist.github.com/erica/04835de3d3d9121ef7308dd9b093158a#introduction>Introduction > > This pitch completes the switch statement's control flow transfer suite by > introducing continue. Doing so provides functionality that a large portion of > newer developers expect from (but do not get from) fallthrough. > > > <https://gist.github.com/erica/04835de3d3d9121ef7308dd9b093158a#motivation>Motivation > > Swift's fallthrough statement means "continue by executing the code defined > in the next case clause". It has at least one solid use-case, which is > demonstrated in this example > <https://gist.github.com/stevestreza/2557dc5ec9e7c694d7ea> > Swift Evolution discussed removing fallthrough on-list in early December > <https://lists.swift.org/pipermail/swift-evolution/2015-December/000226.html> > We came to the consensus that fallthroughoffers sufficient utility to retain > the feature in the language: > > > <https://gist.github.com/erica/04835de3d3d9121ef7308dd9b093158a#the-problem-with-fallthrough>The > Problem with Fallthrough. > > In Swift, fallthrough does not mean: "execute this case and then continue > pattern matching", which is what many naive users expect. Given the following > code where x is 5, they anticipate the function to print "5" and then > "anything else". This is wrong. Swift prints "5" and then "6". > > func test(x : Int) { > switch x { > case 5: > print("5") > fallthrough > case 6: > print("6") > default: > print("anything else") > } > } > Fallthrough is better suited for situations like the following: > > case simple where even more subconditions hold: ... do complex things ...; > fallthrough > case simple where subconditions hold: ... do other things ...; fallthrough > case simple: ... do base things ... > This example produces a sieve where the most restrictive conditions execute > specialized code and then execute code for less restrictive conditions. > > Fallthrough cannot be used for situations like the following example: > > case specialized situation 1: ... code specific to situation 1 ...; > fallthrough > case specialized situation 2: ... code specific to situation 2 ...; > fallthrough > case specialized situation 3: ... code specific to situation 3 ...; > fallthrough > case general: ... general code applicable as well to the three specialized > situations ... > Those coming from C-like languages might have the insight to expect (wrongly, > it should be noted) "5", then "6", then "anything else", which is what you'd > get with the following flawed C-ish code, where case statements are missing > break. > > int x = 5; > switch (x) { > case 5: NSLog(@"5"); // no break; > case 6: NSLog(@"6"); // no break; > default: NSLog(@"anything else"); > } > Swift-style switch statements are more powerful and general than C-style > switch statements. While I do not endorse C-style switch statements, I do > think there's a case to be made for continue, which would mean "continue > pattern matching". It would look like this: > > case specialized situation 1: ... code specific to situation 1 ...; continue > case specialized situation 2: ... code specific to situation 2 ...; continue > case specialized situation 3: ... code specific to situation 3 ...; continue > case general: ... general code applicable as well to the three specialized > situations ... > In this example, code that matched general might execute any of the three > specialized subconditions as well but would not have to fall through each > case. So if a pattern matched scenarios 1 and 3, it would execute those cases > and the general case, but not scenario 2. > > > <https://gist.github.com/erica/04835de3d3d9121ef7308dd9b093158a#the-advantages-of-continue>The > advantages of continue > > If adopted, continue allows code to execute multiple matching patterns > It naturally reduces code redundancy where fallthrough cannot be used but > code applies to multiple cases (such as the 1, 3, and general example above). > It uses an existing control flow transfer keyword, using it in a reasonably > harmonious application that isn't that far out of step with how the keyword > is used in other parts of the language. > > <https://gist.github.com/erica/04835de3d3d9121ef7308dd9b093158a#detailed-design>Detailed > Design > > In the current design, switch statements support subset of control flow > transfer: > > control-transfer-statement → break-statement > control-transfer-statement → fallthrough-statement > control-transfer-statement → return-statement > control-transfer-statement → throw-statement > Notably missing is "continue", which this proposal would adopt. > > control-transfer-statement → continue-statement > The definition of continue in a switch statement would mean "after executing > the previous statements in this case clause, continue pattern matching the > remaining cases until a match or default is found. > > continue could either be disallowed in the final case (typically default) or > could be ignored if included. > > > <https://gist.github.com/erica/04835de3d3d9121ef7308dd9b093158a#impact-on-existing-code>Impact > on Existing Code > > None. > > > <https://gist.github.com/erica/04835de3d3d9121ef7308dd9b093158a#alternatives-considered>Alternatives > Considered > > Not adopting this idea > _______________________________________________ > swift-evolution mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution
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