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I'm trying to pass data from a PFTableViewCell to the next view controller(details) with prepareForSegue function. I think I've put in the right code but when I run the app and click on the cell, my app crashes and I get this message "unexpectedly found nil while unwrapping an Optional value". I've tried many variations for the prepareForSegue function to pass the data but it would never appear on the next view controller.

In my FirstViewController I have this code written:

override func prepareForSegue(segue: UIStoryboardSegue, sender: AnyObject?)  {
            if segue.identifier == "Detail" {
                if let destination = segue.destinationViewController as? ResponseViewController {
                let path = tableView?.indexPathForSelectedRow!
                let cell = tableView!.cellForRowAtIndexPath(path!) as! Post
                destination.name = (cell.name.text!)
                destination.message = (cell.message.text!)
              }

Here is the code to display the data passed in the ResponseViewController:

  var name = String?()
    var message = String?()

@IBOutlet weak var userName: UILabel!
@IBOutlet weak var userMessage: UILabel!

override func viewDidLoad() {
        super.viewDidLoad()
  userName.text! = name!
  userMessage.text! = message!
}

Now how do I fix this issue or better yet how can I prepareForSegue in swift 2.0?

2
  • one of your variables is nil--you can't use a nil value in your expressions. If you unwrap 'nil' using '!' your program crashes with this error message. (Swift forces you to deal with nil values at compile time, vs at runtime as with Obj-C)
    – nielsbot
    Oct 27, 2015 at 21:34
  • try replacing every '!' with '?', and getting your code to compile that way.
    – nielsbot
    Oct 27, 2015 at 21:34

1 Answer 1

1

One of your Optional variables contains nil.

Using '!' forces unwrapping of Optional values. If an Optional contains nil when it is unwrapped your program crashes with this error message. Try to avoid using force-casting (as!) and force-unwrapping.

Here's a nil safe version

override func prepareForSegue(segue: UIStoryboardSegue, sender: AnyObject?)  {
            if segue.identifier == "Detail" {
                if let destination = segue.destinationViewController as? ResponseViewController
                , path = tableView?.indexPathForSelectedRow
                , cell = tableView?.cellForRowAtIndexPath( path ) as? Post
            {
                destination.name = cell.name.text ?? "nil"
                destination.message = cell.message.text ?? "nil"
            }

and

var name: String?
var message: String?

@IBOutlet weak var userName: UILabel?
@IBOutlet weak var userMessage: UILabel?

override func viewDidLoad() 
{
    super.viewDidLoad()
    userName?.text = name ?? "nil"
    userMessage?.text = message ?? "nil"
}

N.b.:

  • ?? is the nil-coalescing operator. If the value on the left is nil, the value on the right is substituted.
  • You can optionally call methods on an optional value using the ?. accessor. If the value on the left is nil, the result will short-circuit to nil
4
  • Ok my app doesn't crash anymore(Thank you for that!) but the data from the firstviewcontroller hasn't passed to the ResponseViewController. Do you know why that could and how I can do this?
    – JoshyJay
    Oct 27, 2015 at 22:55
  • Well, that was the problem: one of your values is nil. You have to track down why it's nil instead of the value you expect. You could ask a separate question?
    – nielsbot
    Oct 28, 2015 at 0:38
  • Sorry I'm new to coding. What do you mean by tracking down why it's nil? And if ask a separate question would be able to help me solve this issue? I've been stuck on it with my team for over a week.
    – JoshyJay
    Oct 28, 2015 at 4:35
  • Any variable whose type ends with a ? is optional. That means it is either a value or it is no value at all. (nil is the name for no value). So at some point, one of your variables of optional type was assigned nil. The easiest way to resolve this would be to add breakpoints to your code and then run it. Execution of your program will be paused when it reaches a line of code where you have set a breakpoint. Then, you can use the debugger to inspect what values your variables have been assigned. Sorry--any more would be beyond the scope of a simple answer.
    – nielsbot
    Oct 28, 2015 at 6:18

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