You don't have to.
#if false {
// disabled code here
}
> On Aug 29, 2016, at 1:16 PM, DifferentApps info via swift-evolution
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> The advantage is that you do not need to define a conditional flag for the
> #if.
> It is also more concise.
>
> Code disabling (with /{...}/) is a tool useful when developing algorithm, and
> disabled code should not be aimed to remain definitively in a Swift file.
>
> Andre Ponzo
>
>> Le 29 août 2016 à 20:20, Magnus Ahltorp <[email protected]> a écrit :
>>
>>
>>> 27 Aug. 2016 21:03 Andre Ponzo via swift-evolution
>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>> 1) Advantages of disabled code ( /{ ... } ) instead of commented-out code
>>> (/* ... */):
>>
>>> 2) Advantages of /{ ... } instead of "if false { ... }":
>>
>> What are the advantages of this compared to conditional compilation (#if)?
>>
>> /Magnus
>
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