Quick answer for the quick question "Why?":
Once you add a get
(or set
) to a property, it turns into a Computed Property. Computed properties may be read-only, thus requiring only a get
ter, but they may not be write-only. So if you add a set
ter to a property, you turn it into a computer property hence you must add a getter as well.
EDIT: Following comments, Why can Computed Properties be read-only, but not write-only?
I can't find official documentation to back this up, so the following explanation is solely based on my logical point of view:
Computed Properties don't store actual data on their variables; instead they compute data to display.
var a:Int = 5 // Stored property
var timesTen:Int { // Computed Property
get {
return a * 10
}
}
From the example above: a
is a Stored property. Therefore, its get
method automatically returns a
's value. Now think of timesTen
: What's its value? Since it doesn't store any value in timesTen
variable, you must tell the computed property how and where to read its "value" from. So that's why you can't use a computed property for writing-only purposes.
Workaround / How to avoid it
For simple properties you may use didSet
or willSet
to achieve the desired purpose:
var proxy: MyProxy?
{
willSet { if _proxy == nil && newValue != nil { _proxy = newValue } }
}
If you are using Swift 2.x, you may use the guard
statement to for a cleaner code:
var proxy: MyProxy?
{
willSet {
guard (_proxy == nil && newValue != nil) else { return }
_proxy = newValue
}
}
Another observation
If _proxy
is not required to be private
you may remove it completely, using only one variable/property instead of two:
var proxy: MyProxy!
{
willSet {
guard (proxy == nil && newValue != nil) else { return }
// By not preventing `willSet` to continue, `newValue` will automatically assigned to `proxy`
}
}