Just another consideration: the consequence could be about avoiding any 
`#pragma` (or equivalent), semantic instructions out of comments, those, in my 
opinion, should be fully ignored by compiler and IDE: knowing that comments are 
not ignored  by compiler or IDE, a developer may think not using comments his 
code at all.
`// isghe: maybe some hack code here it will be executed by IDE.`
That is why I am proposing a `#pragma` or equivalent.
thanks, Isidoro

On Sep 06, 2016, at 02:10 AM, isidoro carlo ghezzi <[email protected]> 
wrote:

// isghe: ok

Sent from my iPhone

On 05 Sep 2016, at 22:31, Xiaodi Wu <[email protected]> wrote:

I agree: "mark" (IMO) is in the same category as "todo" and "fixme", and all 
are bona fide comments. If you wish your code to be disabled without becoming parsed as a comment, use 
instead `#if false`.

On Mon, Sep 5, 2016 at 15:27 Jean-Daniel Dupas via swift-evolution 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Le 5 sept. 2016 à 00:53, isidoro carlo ghezzi via swift-evolution 
<[email protected]> a écrit :

Hi all,

I think the "old style" `#pragma` is necessary in Swift.
Exactly in the same way it is available in C/C++ or Objective-C/C++, or in 
something else portable way.

Because `#pragma` is not handled in Swift, in Xcode they overloaded the 
semantic of comments, giving to the comment `// MARK:` the semantic of `#pragma 
mark`

But my point of view is that, I would like that what it is written in a source 
comment (what it is written after a // or between /* */ ) should be fully 
ignore by compiler or IDE.

I understand that maybe a compiler shouldn't lose time handling `#pragma 
options`, but giving semantics to source comment, I think it can be dangerous 
and misunderstood.

The implementation in Swift compiler should be simple, ignoring any line 
beginning with `#pragma` (ok I know It is not simple)
The IDE will handle the `#pragma`

That's why they invented `#pragma`in C/C++ Objective-C/C++ right?

I don’t think it is a reason pragma exists. except for #pragma mark, I’m not 
sure the compiler ignore any pragma. They are used to control the compiler 
behaviors (controlling warning, specifying linker dependencies, enabled 
specific feature like OpenMP, etc…) and not at all to interact with the IDE. I 
would even says that pragma mark is an abuse of the #pragma construct as it is 
ignored by the compiler and used by the IDE only.

I’m strongly again introducing #pragma without very very good reason into 
swift. Asking the IDE to parse comment to extract metadata is not worst abusing 
pragma to do the same, and at least it is forward and backward compatible with 
any other tools.

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