While no topic is formally off the table, to revisit a topic requires fresh insight. `private(file)` was suggested at the time and rejected in favor of `fileprivate`, and we really don't need another rehash of how much each person likes one or the other. On Fri, Oct 7, 2016 at 09:02 Adriano Ferreira via swift-evolution < swift-evolution@swift.org> wrote:
> +1 > > I would also rather have: > > private(scope) > private(file) > private(module) > etc… > > — A > > On Oct 7, 2016, at 4:24 AM, Haravikk via swift-evolution < > swift-evolution@swift.org> wrote: > > > On 7 Oct 2016, at 07:39, David Hart via swift-evolution < > swift-evolution@swift.org> wrote: > > Hello community, > > From all the proposals which has gone into Swift 3, *[SE-0025] Scoped > Access Level* is the only one I’m having second thoughts about. Before > launching a discussion around it, I’m curious to know if it's worth > discussing it or if the “ship has sailed”. As the plan is to allow future > versions of Swift to break source-compatibility in certain rare scenarios, > perhaps we have a chance to reconsider certain proposals? > > Regards, > David. > _______________________________________________ > swift-evolution mailing list > swift-evolution@swift.org > https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution > > > What in particular don't you like about it? > > Personally I still don't like the use of fileprivate as the keyword, I was > very much in favour of a bracketed system like: > > private(scope) Current private (I think, it doesn't appear to be > equivalent to protected in other languages anyway so I wouldn't call it > type). > private(file) Current fileprivate > private(module) Current internal/default when omitted > public Current public > > I favour this because it groups all restrictive access levels under > private (since they're all some form of private) with an optional modifier > that's explicit about what it's for. Also, it would have scope to move > things like final into a modifier too, so you might declare a method as > public(final), or public(open) if that's implemented later and so-on. Just > seems like a generally more flexible setup that also reduces the number of > keywords required. > > Some may feel it's noisy, but personally I don't see it as a problem as it > always comes before the func/var/let keyword, generics and function name, > so it's not like it's near anything where the (minor) noise reduces > readability. > > But yeah, having used the new fileprivate for a little while I just don't > like it; it may partly come down to the fact that I use fileprivate a lot > more than I use regular private. If we were to adopt the above scheme I > would recommend that private(file) be the default for use of the plain > private keyword, unless we gain the ability to specify private(type) (i.e- > protected in most other languages), as private(scope) seems like it's the > less common, at least in my experience. > _______________________________________________ > swift-evolution mailing list > swift-evolution@swift.org > https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution > > > _______________________________________________ > swift-evolution mailing list > swift-evolution@swift.org > https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution >
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