4

I am following along a WWDC Session about CloudKit. In this, there was this code snipped:

let changesOperation = CKFetchDatabaseChangesOperation(previousServerChangeToken: privateDatabaseChangeToken)
//(...)
changesOperation.fetchDatabaseChangesCompletionBlock = {
        (newToken: CKServerChangeToken?, more: Bool, error: NSError?) -> Void in
        // error handling here
        self.sharedDBChangeToken = newToken // cache new token
        self.fetchZoneChanges(callback) // using CKFetchRecordZoneChangesOperation
    }

Even though the code was exactly copied from the slides, XCode spilled out this error:

Cannot assign value of type '(CKServerChangeToken?, Bool, NSError?) -> Void' to type '((CKServerChangeToken?, Bool, Error?) -> Void)?'

I am using XCode 8.0 Beta 4 and the target is iOS 10, in case this should be a compiler error.

1 Answer 1

7

In Beta 4[citation needed], the swift-evolution proposal SE-0112 was implemented, affecting error handling.

The important bit here is that Objective-C NSError types are imported in Swift as Error (formerly ErrorProtocol) types instead of NSError.

Just update your type annotation:

changesOperation.fetchDatabaseChangesCompletionBlock = {
    (newToken: CKServerChangeToken?, more: Bool, error: Error?) -> Void in
    // ...
}

As a side note, you can actually omit the parameter types entirely:

changesOperation.fetchDatabaseChangesCompletionBlock = { newToken, more, error in
    // ...
}

For error handling, from what I can tell the error passed is often a CKError, which is a new(?) struct which encapsulates all(?) of the userInfo dictionary on the old NSError.

changesOperation.fetchDatabaseChangesCompletionBlock = { newToken, more, error in
    guard error == nil else {
        if let ckerror = error as? CKError {
            // ... Handle the CKError
        }
        return
    }
    // ... Do something useful
}

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