9

The implicit unwrapping of a Bool type does not seem to work:

var aBoolean: Bool!    // nil
aBoolean = false       // false
aBoolean               // false

aBoolean == true       // false
aBoolean == false      // true

if aBoolean {
    "Hum..."            // "Hum..."
} else {
    "Normal"
}

if aBoolean! {
    "Hum..."
} else {
    "Normal"          // "Normal"
}

If I had declared aBoolean like var aBoolean: Bool?, this would have been the expected behavior but here, I don't get it.

Is this the correct behavior? I didn't find any doc about it.

Thanks!

3
  • 2
    I'm excited to type if !bool! ... someday!
    – GoZoner
    Jun 9, 2014 at 20:24
  • 1
    ^ That's what I thought of too! Hah
    – Dash
    Jun 9, 2014 at 20:26
  • That code won't compile. You're missing a curly brace.
    – matt
    Jun 9, 2014 at 20:29

5 Answers 5

8

The first test is checking whether aBoolean stores a value rather than nil, which it does:

if aBoolean {
    "Hum..."            // "Hum..."
else {
    "Normal"
}

The second test is checking against the actual boolean value stored in aBoolean, which is false:

if aBoolean! {
    "Hum..."
} else {
    "Normal"          // "Normal"
}

This is Illustrated in the Swift book in the "Implicitly Wrapped Optionals" section. I think the implicit unwrapping just doesn't apply with if-statements. I agree it is strange but here is the Apple example:

You can still treat an implicitly unwrapped optional like a normal optional, to check if it contains a value:

let assumedString: String! = "An implicitly unwrapped optional string."

if assumedString {
    println(assumedString)
}
// prints "An implicitly unwrapped optional string."

Excerpt From: Apple Inc. “The Swift Programming Language.” iBooks. https://itun.es/us/jEUH0.l

6
  • 1
    Yes, but the question is why he needs to unwrap the boolean if the boolean is declared as "implicitly unwrapped" by using the exclamation mark Jun 9, 2014 at 20:20
  • @Dash Please see the comment above
    – Damien
    Jun 9, 2014 at 20:24
  • The book says: “You can still treat an implicitly unwrapped optional like a normal optional, to check if it contains a value”, which I think is a hint that this kind of if will check for the existence of a value, rather than checking the value itself. Jun 9, 2014 at 20:25
  • @MattGibson thanks! Can you add the source in a response and I'll accept it right away? :)
    – Damien
    Jun 9, 2014 at 20:28
  • 1
    Thanks @MattGibson! I think we found the quote at the exact same time :)
    – Dash
    Jun 9, 2014 at 20:31
6

Not an answer, but if this is indeed the intended behavior with implicitly unwrapped booleans it's rather disturbing. As soon as you use the expression in any logic proposition it will get unwrapped:

var aBoolean: Bool! = false

if !aBoolean {
    "I'm unwrapping"            // "I'm unwrapping"
}

if aBoolean == false {
    "I'm unwrapping"            // "I'm unwrapping"
}

Say you have this in your code an at some point your model changes and the condition is reversed, you delete the NOT.

if aBoolean {
    "I'm unwrapping"            // <- ouch
}

You just got screwed. Makes me want to avoid the implicit unwrapping.

4
  • Usually you should avoid implicit unwrapping. It's motivation is cases like IBOutlets. Here you have a class with member variables that are still nil after init() finishes, but are assigned a value when the nib is loaded. So from before awakeFromNib() onwards, they will never have a nil value, and all the unwrapping would be pointless. These things are Cocoa objects not bools, so the issue you raise doesn't apply. There may be other similar cases for using implicit unwrapping. But for general use you should be using ordinary conditionals. Jun 9, 2014 at 21:28
  • I don't argue that the proper applications of implicit unwrapping are scarce. All I say is I think a better implementation would be for this to behave as a boolean unless you explicitly try to unwrap it with "if let" ... Jun 9, 2014 at 21:50
  • The proper applications of implicit unwrapping for a Bool are none existent. Your suggestion would break the use of if with any other implicitly unwrapped type, for no advantage. Jun 9, 2014 at 21:55
  • See answer to stackoverflow.com/questions/24842834/… Apple recognizes the issue.
    – Epic Byte
    Jul 22, 2014 at 20:19
2

You are making two different truth-checks.

Given:

var aBoolean: Bool!    // nil
aBoolean = false       // false

if aBoolean {
    "Hum..."            // "Hum..."
else {
    "Normal"
}

if aBoolean! {
    "Hum..."
} else {
    "Normal"          // "Normal"
}

...in the first if aBoolean, the value is not being unwrapped, it is simply testing the optional type to determine if it stores a value.

In the second if aBoolean!, you are testing the truth-value of the unwrapped Bool.

To see that it is indeed being implicitly-unwrapped (when not used in a conditional), try:

println("value of implicitly-unwrapped aBoolean: \(aBoolean)")

...this will print 'true' when aBoolean is set to true, 'false' when it is set to false, and 'nil' when it has not yet been assigned.

1

Here is the behavior clearly shown:

> var bool1 : Bool!
bool1: Bool! = nil
> bool1 = false
> (bool1 ? "yes" : "no")
$R19: (String) = "yes"

In the above, since bool1 is an optional (which becomes a Some instance), the conditional of simply bool1 evaluates to true (it is not nil).

> var bool2 : Bool = false
bool2: Bool = false
> (bool2 ? "yes" : "no")
$R25: (String) = "no"

When bool2 is not an optional, the conditional of simply bool2 evaluates to false (the value of bool2)

0

When declaring a variable as "implicitly unwrapped", using the !, it is still an Optional

This type of variable behaves very much like the standard variable type in Objective-C. It can be assigned to nil, but when you access members you do not need to explicitly unwrap it. In this way it is "unsafe" just like in ObjC because you can be accessing properties from nil

Thus, it is used most commonly when bridging from Objective-C. However, it is still an optional, with the only difference being you don't need to unwrap it to access the contents.

I believe this was added mostly to support interop between Swift and Obj-C and might be good practice to sparingly use it in pure Swift code. (Swift guidelines are a fuzzy thing right now and someone might prove me wrong soon!)

2
  • In pure swift they are useful for IBOutlets. These are nil until the nib has been loaded, but from then on they have a value. Checking the value each time would be tedious. But here they are used for Cocoa objects so confusion for Bool! isn't an issue. Jun 9, 2014 at 21:32
  • @SteveWaddicor Great point! I believe IBOutlets are implicitly unwrapped optionals by default, so you really don't need the ! syntax anywhere.
    – Jack
    Jun 9, 2014 at 21:33

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