> On 30 Jun 2017, at 07:23, Brent Royal-Gordon via swift-evolution 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> On Jun 27, 2017, at 10:16 AM, Erica Sadun via swift-evolution 
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> Using an operator to provide feedback on the context of a failed unwrap has 
>> become a commonly implemented approach in the Swift developer Community. 
>> What are your thoughts about adopting this widely-used operator into the 
>> standard library?
>> 
>> guard !lastItem.isEmpty else { return }
>> let lastItem = array.last !! "Array must be non-empty"
>> 
>> Details here:  https://gist.github.com/erica/423e4b1c63b95c4c90338cdff4939a9b
>> 
>> Thank you for your thoughtful feedback, -- E
> 
> Finally found a few minutes to read this thread.
> 
> I'm a big fan of the `Never`-based approach. (I was before, but I am more so 
> now.) Here are the points I can see in its favor:
> 
> 1. It is extremely clear about what's happening—`!!` is another random 
> operator to learn, but `fatalError(_:)` or `preconditionFailure(_:)` are 
> fairly self-explanatory, and `??` is something you might already be using.
> 
> 2. It allows you to control the optimization behavior by using `fatalError`, 
> `preconditionFailure`, or `assertionFailure` as desired.
> 
> 3. If we later change `throw` from being a statement to being a 
> `Never`-returning expression, you could use `throw` on the right-hand side of 
> `??`.

Hadn't thought of that. That's really cool!

> 4. It supports other `Never`-returning operations, like `abort()` or 
> `exit(_:)` or your custom `usage()` function, on the right side of `??`.

That's very important IMHO.

> 5. It supports file-and-line error reporting without having to add any new 
> features; `!!` could not do this because an operator can't have extra, 
> defaulted parameters to carry the file and line.
> 
> 6. It harmonizes with the eventual idea of making `Never` a universal bottom 
> type, but we don't actually have to implement that today, because we can just 
> overload `??` for now.
> 
> Against these advantages, the only one I can see for `!!` is that it is 
> terse. Terseness is good, especially for a feature which is competing with 
> the single-character postfix `!` operator, but I can't help but be drawn to 
> the flexibility and power of `??` with a `Never` expression on the right-hand 
> side.
> 
> -- 
> Brent Royal-Gordon
> Architechies
> 
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