> On Sep 16, 2017, at 11:28 AM, Christopher Kornher via swift-evolution 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> 
>> On Sep 16, 2017, at 8:41 AM, Rod Brown via swift-evolution 
>> <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> On 16 Sep 2017, at 7:22 pm, Goffredo Marocchi via swift-evolution 
>> <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> 
>>> I am still unsure why we are choosing again a default that protects library 
>>> writers more than library users where it is reasonable to expect the former 
>>> to have better mastery of the language, to architect a library with some 
>>> scalability, and ability to add unit test to cover themselves from issues 
>>> than the latter.
>> 
>> Because protecting library owners protects library users.
> 
> If a library writer can’t remember to declare non-exhaustive enums as such, 
> they probably will forget many more important aspects of creating a library. 
> They probably should not be writing libraries. Arguments like this make sense 
> on the surface, but creating libraries involves hundreds or thousands of 
> decisions. I wish you luck in making that process idiot proof. A library 
> linter could easily warn that exposed enums are exhaustive. The exhaustive 
> keyword should be optional to make the decision obvious and suppress 
> warnings. Complicating the user experience in a vain attempt to make “expert" 
> coding safer is misguided.

This may be a little harsh, but there don’t seem to be many advocates for 
novice and “ordinary” application developers on this list. That is not 
unexpected given the number of extremely knowledgeable compiler and library 
developers on this list (for whom I have the highest respect). I believe that 
there are more creative (and probably more difficult to build) possible 
solutions to some of the tough problems in Swift’s future. In that spirit, see 
below.

> 
> 
>> 
>> If you declare it is exhaustive and it was an oversight, and then realise 
>> after the fact that you are wrong, you have to open it up. This will break 
>> third party apps. It will be disallowed by the ABI compatibility 
>> requirements.
>> 
>> If you declare it isn’t exhaustive due to an oversight (or perhaps you’re 
>> just not sure yet), and then realise after the fact it is exhaustive, you 
>> can close it up. This will not break third party apps. It will also be 
>> allowed for ABI compatibility.
>> 
>> This benefits everyone. Make library owners choose a guarantee, rather than 
>> be defaulted into it. Much like they have to declare choose to declare 
>> “final” on a class: you can’t retroactively reneg that promise: it will 
>> break everyone who assumed it to be the case!
> 
> It does not benefit the creation of 90+% of enums. It is one more arcane rule 
> for the vast majority of developers.

The Swift compiler could offer a “strict enum exhaustiveness” (bikeshedding not 
included) switch that could be enabled by default for library targets and 
disabled by default for “application” targets. The switch would make not 
explicitly specifying exhaustiveness an error or warning when enabled. Perhaps 
this could be combined with other options that would tailor the development 
experience for library/application developers. This would help avoid “zero-sum” 
choices between benefitting library or application developers in the future.

Xcode and the SPM should be able to distinguish between the target types and 
generate the proper defaults. I do not believe that this is too mysterious for 
developers. There would be learning step for developers wiring their first 
library, but that is not necessarily a bad thing since creating a reusable 
library requires a different mindset than creating an application.


> 
>> 
>>> 
>>> Exhaustive and open by default with keywords to close things down if the 
>>> framework author wants them.
>>> 
>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>> 
>>> On 16 Sep 2017, at 09:55, David Hart via swift-evolution 
>>> <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> I’m still very much bothered by having 2 new keywords. I would really 
>>>> prefer the following plan:
>>>> 
>>>> Exhaustive by default in Swift 4
>>>> No new keyword in Swift 4 to change that behaviour
>>>> Non-exhaustive by default outside the module in Swift 5
>>>> exhaustive keyword to change the default behaviour
>>>> 
>>>> Like that, we don’t need nonexhaustive.
>>>> 
>>>> Thoughts?
>>>> David.
>>>> 
>>>>> On 13 Sep 2017, at 21:16, Jordan Rose via swift-evolution 
>>>>> <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Proposal updated, same URL: 
>>>>> https://github.com/jrose-apple/swift-evolution/blob/non-exhaustive-enums/proposals/nnnn-non-exhaustive-enums.md
>>>>>  
>>>>> <https://github.com/jrose-apple/swift-evolution/blob/non-exhaustive-enums/proposals/nnnn-non-exhaustive-enums.md>.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Thanks again for all the feedback so far, everyone!
>>>>> Jordan
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>>> On Sep 12, 2017, at 17:55, Jordan Rose via swift-evolution 
>>>>>> <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Sorry, I got distracted by other tasks! Both the discussion here and 
>>>>>> within Apple has moved towards making "non-exhaustive" the default, 
>>>>>> which, to be honest, I too think is the best design. I'll update the 
>>>>>> proposal today to reflect that, though I still want to keep both the 
>>>>>> "nonexhaustive" and "exhaustive" keywords for Swift 4 compatibility for 
>>>>>> now (or whatever we end up naming them). The compatibility design is a 
>>>>>> little less ambitious than Brent's; as currently proposed, Swift 4 mode 
>>>>>> continues to default to 'exhaustive' all the time, even in the actual 
>>>>>> Swift 5 release.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> I still want to respond to Brent's points directly, but I think you and 
>>>>>> Vladimir have done a good job discussing them already. I'll send out the 
>>>>>> updated proposal tomorrow, after I have a little more time to think 
>>>>>> about #invalid.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Thanks for putting time into this!
>>>>>> Jordan
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On Sep 9, 2017, at 17:34, Rod Brown <[email protected] 
>>>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Jordan,
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Do you have any other thoughts about the ongoing discussion here, 
>>>>>>> especially regarding Chris’ comments? As you’re the one pushing this 
>>>>>>> forward, I’d really like to know what your thoughts are regarding this?
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> - Rod
>>>>>> 
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