42
func myfunc<T>(i:T) -> T {
    return i
}

is it possible to make this generic function a closure?

let myfunc = { <T>(i:T) -> T in
    return i
}

this doesn't work...

3
  • 1
    Similar (same?) question here: stackoverflow.com/questions/25401584/….
    – Martin R
    Commented Aug 28, 2014 at 9:28
  • 1
    Generics cannot be used with closures. The answer linked by @MartinR provides a workaround. I don't think this question is a duplicate, because the other question is about making a closure with generics work, whereas this is an explicit question whether generics can be used or not.
    – Antonio
    Commented Aug 28, 2014 at 9:41
  • I believe the answer is that this doesn't work because it actually makes no sense (having nothing to do with Swift in particular). myfunc would be of an abstract type, which is the same as trying to construct an abstract class. I discuss more in an answer to the question @MartinR links.
    – Rob Napier
    Commented Aug 28, 2014 at 13:40

4 Answers 4

25

No, because variables and expressions can't be generic. There are only generic functions and generic types.


To clarify: In some languages you can have types with a universal quantifier, like forall a. a -> a. But in Swift, types cannot have a universal quantifier. So expressions and values cannot be themselves generic. Function declarations and type declarations can be generic, but when you use such a generic function or an instance of such a generic type, some type (which could be a real type or a type variable) is chosen as the type argument, and thereafter the value you get is no longer itself generic.

4
  • 1
    I agree with Rob, in the sense that it should make sense to use typealias in conjunction with a closure to define a generic closure type
    – Mazyod
    Commented Oct 6, 2015 at 20:24
  • In most programming languages, generic function arguments are effectively just function arguments with values baked in at compile-time. So it would mean that the possible values for the generic argument are evaluated at compile-time instead of just used at run-time (like normal function/closure arguments). The advantage would be the ability to parameterize a closure with types that need to be evaluated at compile-time, e.g. StringLiteralConvertible. I think your confusion lies in thinking about the variable or expression as generic; rather, it's the closure which is generic. Commented Jun 22, 2016 at 3:18
  • How about this one ? typealias ResultClosure<T> = (ResultCode, String?, T?) -> Void func loginUser(userName: String, password: String, resultHandler: ResultClosure<TokenModel>?) It is generic and have compile time type check Commented Feb 19, 2020 at 23:06
  • Variables are allowed to be generic in C++. Commented Jun 26, 2020 at 15:54
12

Probably you need something like this.

Type declaration:

typealias ResultClosure<T> = (ResultCode, String?, T?) -> Void

Function declaration:

func loginUser(userName: String, password: String, resultHandler: ResultClosure<TokenModel>?)

Usage:

    NetConnector.shared.loginUser(userName: userName ?? "", password: password ?? "") { (code, message, data) in
        self.display?.unlockScreen()
        if code == .success {
            if let activeToken = data {
                AppData.shared.userToken = activeToken
            }
            self.display?.showHome()
        } else {
            self.display?.showError(errorMessage: message)
        }
    }
1
  • 1
    Nice, but it won't work using type constraint and defining an object property with that type (typealias)
    – OhadM
    Commented Dec 28, 2021 at 13:07
7

As mentioned, variables in Swift cannot be generic, so creating a closure, whose generic types are specified by the caller is not possible. However, there are workarounds:

With SE-253, it is possible to make arbitrary (nominal) types callable. So instead of declaring a generic closure, we can declare a (non-generic) struct that has a generic callAsFunction method:

struct MyFunc {
    func callAsFunction<T>(_ i: T) -> T {
        return i
    }
}

Now, we can declare a non-generic variable that we can call with a generic value:

let myFunc = MyFunc()
let x = myFunc(42) // -> Int
let y = myFunc("foo") // -> String

Note that this workaround doesn't apply to all situations, but it can be helpful in some.

0

I have found some alternative way , you can use Anyobject in your closure and pass any values to your method .

typealias genericCompletion<T:AnyObject> = ((Bool,T,String) -> Void)
struct Student {
    var name:String = "Kishore"
    var age : String = "125"
}
class ViewController: UIViewController {

    override func viewDidLoad() {
        super.viewDidLoad()

        self.createAGenericReturn { (success, object, message) in

        }

        self.createStructGeneric { (success, student, message) in

        }

    }


    func createAGenericReturn(callback:@escaping(genericCompletion<AnyObject>)){
        callback(true,434.433 as AnyObject,"kishoreTest")
    }

    func createStructGeneric(callback:@escaping(genericCompletion<AnyObject>)){
        callback(true,Student.init() as AnyObject,"kishoreTest")
    }

}

Here you can see I mentioned Generic as Anyobject typealias genericCompletion = ((Bool,T,String) -> Void) , So you can pass any values to it .

1
  • Interesting solution, making use of polymorphism. However, this weakens the type checker, also the code that needs to implement the generic closure will have to do a lot of downcases if it will want to support multiple types.
    – Cristik
    Commented Mar 30, 2021 at 6:52

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