In addition to this syntax with a protocol extension:
protocol P {}
extension P where Self : UIView {}
... I discovered by accident that you can use the same where clause on the protocol itself:
protocol P where Self : UIView {}
Notice that this is not the same as a where clause constraining a generic protocol, and does not itself make P a generic protocol.
My experiments seem to show that only a colon can be used here, and the thing after the colon must be a class or a protocol (which may be generic).
I became curious: how did this escape my notice? So I went hunting for evidence of when it arose. In Swift 3.0, the former syntax is legal but not the latter. In Swift 3.3, both are legal. So the latter syntax must have been quietly introduced in something like Swift 3.2. I say "quietly" because I can't find anything about it in the release notes.
What is the second syntax for? Is it, as it appears, just a convenient way of making sure no other type can adopt this protocol? The Swift headers do not seem to make any use of it.
where Self : UIView
in a protocol declaration was accidental consequence of SE-0156 – the feature itself hasn't been fully implemented yet (really the compiler should have rejected the syntax until ready). It currently has lots of sharp edges around it, so I would steer clear of it for now – see stackoverflow.com/a/50647762/2976878.