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Sorry new to all this, but could do with a hand. Realise its probably a very simple solution, but here is my troublesome code:

@IBAction func loginAction(sender: AnyObject) {

    var username = self.usernameField.text
    var password = self.passwordField.text

    if (count(username.utf16) < 4 || count(password.utf16) < 5) {

        var alert = UIAlertView(title: "Invalid", message: "Username must be greater then 4 and Password must be greater then 5", delegate: self, cancelButtonTitle: "OK")
        alert.show()

    }else {

        self.actInd.startAnimating()

        PFUser.logInWithUsernameInBackground(username, password: password, block: { (user, error) -> Void in

            self.actInd.stopAnimating()

            if ((user) != nil) {

                var alert = UIAlertView(title: "Success", message: "Logged In", delegate: self, cancelButtonTitle: "OK")
                //alert.show()

                self.navigationController!.popToRootViewControllerAnimated(false)

            }else {

                var alert = UIAlertView(title: "Error", message: "\(error)", delegate: self, cancelButtonTitle: "OK")
                alert.show()

Photo of Errors: Value of optional type 'String?' not unwrapped; did you mean to use '!' or '?'

2 Answers 2

1

The error message is pretty much self-explanatory, you need to unwrap the optionals. outlets are optionals so both usernameField.text and passwordField.text return a type String? (The type is optional string, not string) so you can't do any string related unless you unwrap it to be String. here is how you can do that

if  let username = self.usernameField.text, password = self.passwordField.text {
    //your code
}
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  • One correction tho: The type is an Optional String, not an optional, not a string. ;) It's pronounced "Optional <type>" :) Oct 16, 2015 at 0:17
  • Thanks, I'll edit that :) I just wanted to emphasize its not a string
    – Lukas
    Oct 16, 2015 at 0:31
  • :) Fun fact, Optional is actually an Enum :) Oct 16, 2015 at 1:02
  • I'm having one of those days where I have no idea what I'm doing... Would you be able to show me how I'd implement your example above? Thank you very much for your help so far btw! Oct 16, 2015 at 19:22
  • I made the edit on your question. its actually very very simple :)
    – Lukas
    Oct 16, 2015 at 19:43
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The purpose of optionals in Swift is to reduce the number of runtime errors. It allows the code to recognize when a variable has no value. 'no value' is different from nil and all other values.

When you reference an optional type you can force the compiler to get the value from the variable by adding an ! to the name. This should only be done when you are absolutely certain that there is a value to access. If you do this and no value is defined, your app will have a runtime error (crash). The optional can also be tested with an if to see if it has a value.

Think of this error message as a warning to you to check for a possible failure point.

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