Here are a couple additional takes that may help somebody out there:
Using your example:
enum Foo {
case bar(baz: String)
case baz(bar: String)
}
You can consider to "nest" it in a case
of your own enum
:
enum FooExtended {
case foo(Foo) // <-- Here will live your instances of `Foo`
case fuzz(Int)
}
With this solution, it becomes more laborious to access the "hidden" cases associated type. But this simplification could actually be beneficial in certain applications.
Another alternative passes by just recreate and extend it while having a way to convert Foo
into the extended enum
FooExtended
(eg. with a custom init
):
enum FooExtended {
case bar(baz: String)
case baz(bar: String)
case fuzz(Int)
init(withFoo foo: Foo) {
switch foo {
case .bar(let baz):
self = .bar(baz: baz)
case .baz(let bar):
self = .baz(bar: bar)
}
}
}
There may be many places where one, the other, or both of these solutions make absolutely no sense, but I'm pretty sure they may be handy to somebody out there (even if only as an exercise).