I understand. I am not fixed on this approach ether. I do believe that there 
needs to be a controllable layer of  granularity with respect to what is 
exposed inside of an extension. I was used this approach since the fileprivate 
was already there.

I am not looking to make a perceived bad situation worse. I do want to be able 
have encapsulation in an extension that can be shared in a group that is easy 
to define and to perceive. Adrian had mentioned an idea that, if I understood 
it correctly, was based on some modifier to the AC of private.

I can appreciate that what I suggested as a solution may not be well received 
but I would like to elevate this up to the question of: "Is there support in 
the community for a way of having properties and methods marked as only 
accessible between a group of related extensions  and the object type that they 
are extending?"

- Jim
_____________________________
From: Saagar Jha <saa...@saagarjha.com<mailto:saa...@saagarjha.com>>
Sent: Thursday, December 8, 2016 7:55 AM
Subject: Re: [swift-evolution] Any consideration for directoryprivate as a 
compliment to fileprivate?
To: Adrian Zubarev 
<adrian.zuba...@devandartist.com<mailto:adrian.zuba...@devandartist.com>>
Cc: swift-evolution 
<swift-evolution@swift.org<mailto:swift-evolution@swift.org>>, Jim Malak 
<jim.ma...@beryle-lee.com<mailto:jim.ma...@beryle-lee.com>>


Did someone ask for more feedback?

Overall, I'm pretty -1 on this proposal. I never really liked the fileprivate 
solution of scope being created to match (in my mind not quite related) file 
system/organizational boundaries of files–but it was the best compromise we 
could come up with at the time (I’m up for improvements, but I fear that it’s 
too late to change now). The issue with directoryprivate/folderprivate is that 
it takes these issues from fileprivate and compounds across many files. With 
one file it’s easy to figure out what’s going on, but once you have a more than 
a few than keeping track of access between them becomes a pain.

Saagar Jha



On Dec 8, 2016, at 4:38 AM, Adrian Zubarev via swift-evolution 
<swift-evolution@swift.org<mailto:swift-evolution@swift.org>> wrote:


As an advice, you should first hear out what the community thinks about the 
idea, before writing anything, because one person might share your idea. Others 
including myself may not like it. Wait for more feedback first. ;)



--
Adrian Zubarev
Sent with Airmail


Am 8. Dezember 2016 um 13:35:56, Jim Malak 
(jim.ma...@beryle-lee.com<mailto:jim.ma...@beryle-lee.com>) schrieb:

Great. Is there some other steps I should go through or is the next step to 
write a draft proposal?

Kind regards,
Jim Malak
Director
Beryle & Lee, Inc,
O +1-330-818-2600
M +1-234-716-2658
F +1-330-818-2560

email/Skype: jim.ma...@beryle-lee.com<mailto:jim.ma...@beryle-lee.com>
http://beryle-lee.com<http://beryle-lee.com/>
http://linkedin.com/in/jamesmalak
https://www.facebook.com/BeryleLeeInc

________________________________
From: Aron Lindberg <ar...@me.com<mailto:ar...@me.com>>
Sent: Thursday, December 8, 2016 7:34:06 AM
To: Jim Malak
Cc: Adrian Zubarev; swift-evolution@swift.org<mailto:swift-evolution@swift.org>
Subject: Re: [swift-evolution] Any consideration for directoryprivate as a 
compliment to fileprivate?

Since Xcode is not a requirement for Swift development no, I was talking about 
a file system folder.

On 8 Dec 2016, at 13.30, Jim Malak via swift-evolution 
<swift-evolution@swift.org<mailto:swift-evolution@swift.org>> wrote:

I totally agree.  For clarity, are we in agreement that the definition of 
"folder" is the underlying file system's implementation of a folder rather than 
some metadata setting? I am thinking of how Xcode as a view of project folder 
that at times can leave on one confused.

My preference is to keep it simple, to use the underlying file system to decide 
what is a folder. Does that sound ok?

Kind regards,
Jim Malak
Director
Beryle & Lee, Inc,
O +1-330-818-2600
M +1-234-716-2658
F +1-330-818-2560

email/Skype: jim.ma...@beryle-lee.com<mailto:jim.ma...@beryle-lee.com>
http://beryle-lee.com<http://beryle-lee.com/>
http://linkedin.com/in/jamesmalak
https://www.facebook.com/BeryleLeeInc

________________________________
From: Aron Lindberg <ar...@me.com<mailto:ar...@me.com>>
Sent: Thursday, December 8, 2016 6:26:10 AM
To: Adrian Zubarev
Cc: Jim Malak; swift-evolution@swift.org<mailto:swift-evolution@swift.org>
Subject: Re: [swift-evolution] Any consideration for directoryprivate as a 
compliment to fileprivate?

I think this is a great idea!

I would prefer calling it folderprivate tho.

On 8 Dec 2016, at 08.29, Adrian Zubarev via swift-evolution 
<swift-evolution@swift.org<mailto:swift-evolution@swift.org>> wrote:


Whoops I meant directoryprivate not dictionaryprivate. I’m probably still 
sleepy.



--
Adrian Zubarev
Sent with Airmail


Am 8. Dezember 2016 um 08:18:24, Adrian Zubarev 
(adrian.zuba...@devandartist.com<mailto:adrian.zuba...@devandartist.com>) 
schrieb:

You haven’t seen this in the list because no one requested dictionaryprivate 
yet. :D

________________________________

@core-team: See what you have done with >>file<<private thing. typerprivate, 
typepublic all these requests for new access modifiers. [facepalm]

Instead of just going with

privateprivate(file)// for new one    private(type)

I know there would be some people that would forget about (file/type) and write 
only private everywhere, which is probably the main reason why we have 
fileprivate now.

________________________________

Anyways let’s be a little more constructive here.

Hi Jim, regarding your request, it feels like this is something that falls into 
the topic of submodules. :) Correct me if I’m wrong here.


--
Adrian Zubarev
Sent with Airmail


Am 8. Dezember 2016 um 07:50:07, Jim Malak via swift-evolution 
(swift-evolution@swift.org<mailto:swift-evolution@swift.org>) schrieb:

My apologies up front if I am going about this incorrectly. I have been 
exploring extensions in Swift 3 both as a part of protocol-oriented programming 
and as a way to encapsulate related code to improve readability and 
maintainablity of otherwise more complex classes I have designed. I am able to 
encapsulate methods and calculated properties in extensions and restrict their 
use to the object type I am extending as long as everything is in one file via 
fileprivate.

I would like to be able to have my class or structure file in a directory that 
contains my associated extensions  (also in separate files) and be able to 
restrict the access  of appropriate properties and  methods to that common 
directory. This would allow the same level encapsulation as fileprivate with 
the benifit of being able to organize code into sepereate files based on 
function.

I did not see this in the commonly rejected list but am unsure if this is 
something that is out of scope for 4.0. Is this something I can write up a 
proposal for? Is there some other approach that I missed that I should be using 
instead?

Kind regards,
Jim Malak


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