The problem is even though String.Index
does conform to Comparable
protocol, you still need to specify the Range type you want to work with public struct Range<Bound> where Bound : Comparable {}
Note: As NSString
uses UTF-16, check this and also in the link you've referred to, your initial code does not work correctly for characters consisting of more than one UTF-16 code point. The following is the updated working version for Swift 3.
extension Range where Bound == String.Index {
init(_ range: NSRange, in string: String) {
let lower16 = string.utf16.index(string.utf16.startIndex, offsetBy: range.location)
let upper16 = string.utf16.index(string.utf16.startIndex, offsetBy: NSMaxRange(range))
if let lower = lower16.samePosition(in: string),
let upper = upper16.samePosition(in: string) {
self.init(lower..<upper)
} else {
fatalError("init(range:in:) could not be implemented")
}
}
}
let string = "❄️Let it snow! ☃️"
let range1 = NSRange(location: 0, length: 1)
let r1 = Range<String.Index>(range1, in: string) // ❄️
let range2 = NSRange(location: 1, length: 2)
let r2 = Range<String.Index>(range2, in: string) // fatal error: init(range:in:) could not be implemented
To answer the OP's comment: The problem is an NSString object encodes a Unicode-compliant text string, represented as a sequence of UTF–16 code units. Unicode scalar values that make up a string’s contents can be up to 21 bits long. The longer scalar values may need two UInt16 values for storage.
Therefore, some letters like ❄️ takes up two UInt16 values in NSString but only one in String. As you pass an NSRange argument to the initializer, you may expect it to work correctly in NSString.
In my example, the results for r1
and r2
after you convert string
to utf16 are '❄️' and a fatal error. Meanwhile, the results from your original solution are '❄️L' and 'Le', respectively. Hopefully, you see the difference.
In case you insist with the solution without converting to utf16, you can take a look at the Swift source code to make decision. In Swift 4, you will have the initializer as a built-in lib. The code is as follows.
extension Range where Bound == String.Index {
public init?(_ range: NSRange, in string: String) {
let u = string.utf16
guard range.location != NSNotFound,
let start = u.index(u.startIndex, offsetBy: range.location, limitedBy: u.endIndex),
let end = u.index(u.startIndex, offsetBy: range.location + range.length, limitedBy: u.endIndex),
let lowerBound = String.Index(start, within: string),
let upperBound = String.Index(end, within: string)
else { return nil }
self = lowerBound..<upperBound
}
}