198

I would like to initialise the value of a @State var in SwiftUI through the init() method of a Struct, so it can take the proper text from a prepared dictionary for manipulation purposes in a TextField. The source code looks like this:

struct StateFromOutside: View {
    let list = [
        "a": "Letter A",
        "b": "Letter B",
        // ...
    ]
    @State var fullText: String = ""

    init(letter: String) {
        self.fullText = list[letter]!
    }

    var body: some View {
        TextField($fullText)
    }
}

Unfortunately the execution fails with the error Thread 1: Fatal error: Accessing State<String> outside View.body

How can I resolve the situation? Thank you very much in advance!

3
  • 12
    Use State(initialValue:)
    – onmyway133
    Mar 16, 2020 at 13:05
  • 11
    @Daniel please make the answer with 150+ coming on second number as accepted answer. As like me, many missed the second answer and stay stuck for a lot of time.
    – Tul
    Jul 4, 2020 at 13:43
  • 1
    The most upvoted answer is probably the answer you want in preference to the accepted answer.
    – Benjohn
    Dec 14, 2020 at 17:44

8 Answers 8

656

SwiftUI doesn't allow you to change @State in the initializer but you can initialize it.

Remove the default value and use _fullText to set @State directly instead of going through the property wrapper accessor.

@State var fullText: String // No default value of ""

init(letter: String) {
    _fullText = State(initialValue: list[letter]!)
}
16
  • 121
    This should be the accepted answer, onAppear may be too late in some cases.
    – Yonat
    Oct 16, 2019 at 17:21
  • 7
    @Diesel At first I was hesitant to use this because I thought it was accessing some internal API, but it turns out it's part of the Swift language. For concise information about how property wrappers work under the hood including the synthesized underscore (_), see docs.swift.org/swift-book/ReferenceManual/Attributes.html under propertyWrapper
    – bcause
    Jul 1, 2020 at 18:49
  • 17
    You should also note that the state you initialise inside init will probably immediately be overridden after all the stored properties are initialised. See this comment where an  engineer explicitly says not to initialise @State using init but to do it inline instead. Jul 8, 2020 at 15:44
  • 10
    The answer is not a solution to the problem. It will not work "like a dream", rather nightmarish. Here, we need to use bindings which can be initialised within the initialiser, if we want to mutate the value within the view. Initialising @State in init will do it only the very first time a value of this view will be created. Subsequent views will not see the value which is passed as argument in the init, but the previous value which is cached by the SwiftUI system. Apr 26, 2021 at 11:21
  • 5
    developer.apple.com/forums/thread/657393 "init is not a good place to update the value of @State vars."
    – shim
    Jan 5, 2022 at 22:55
46

I would try to initialise it in onAppear.

struct StateFromOutside: View {
    let list = [
        "a": "Letter A",
        "b": "Letter B",
        // ...
    ]
    @State var fullText: String = ""

    var body: some View {
        TextField($fullText)
             .onAppear {
                 self.fullText = list[letter]!
             }
    }
}

Or, even better, use a model object (a BindableObject linked to your view) and do all the initialisation and business logic there. Your view will update to reflect the changes automatically.


Update: BindableObject is now called ObservableObject.

4
  • Thank you, this works perfectly (although I have applied the .onAppear on a VStack which is around the TextField). Jun 21, 2019 at 20:05
  • Hacking around a little longer I have noticed that your solution is a workaround for this very situation, but I ran into more situations where I have to initialise a @State var. Although it would be possible to apply this method there as well I do not think that this is the very best way to handle it. Jun 21, 2019 at 20:55
  • @DanielMessner : Yes, I agree, for more complicated cases just use a model object (BindableObject) and do the initialization in that object, either when running init() or triggered in the view by an .onAppear event. Jun 24, 2019 at 12:38
  • 2
    This is not considered the best solution for the particular case in the question - but it is the best solution for another type of problem. I have a @State whose initial value depends on another object I pass in, so each time I show the view, I want it to have a different initial value. The other answer does not solve that, but setting the state in onAppear does. Sep 24, 2020 at 12:34
14

The top answer is an anti-pattern that will cause pain down the road, when the dependency changes (letter) and your state will not update accordingly.

One should never use State(initialValue:) or State(wrappedValue:) to initialize state in a View's init. In fact, State should only be initialized inline, like so:

@State private var fullText: String = "The value"

If that's not feasible, use @Binding, @ObservedObject, a combination between @Binding and @State or even a custom DynamicProperty

More about this here.

1

It's not an issue nowadays to set a default value of the @State variables inside the init method. But you MUST just get rid of the default value which you gave to the state and it will work as desired:

,,,
    @State var fullText: String // <- No default value here

    init(letter: String) {
        self.fullText = list[letter]!
    }

    var body: some View {
        TextField("", text: $fullText)
    }
}
0
1

Depending on the case, you can initialize the State in different ways:

// With default value

@State var fullText: String = "XXX"

// Not optional value and without default value

@State var fullText: String

init(x: String) {
    fullText = x
}

// Optional value and without default value

@State var fullText: String

init(x: String) {
    _fullText = State(initialValue: x)
}
0

The answer of Bogdan Farca is right for this case but we can't say this is the solution for the asked question because I found there is the issue with the Textfield in the asked question. Still we can use the init for the same code So look into the below code it shows the exact solution for asked question.

struct StateFromOutside: View {
    let list = [
        "a": "Letter A",
        "b": "Letter B",
        // ...
    ]
    @State var fullText: String = ""

    init(letter: String) {
        self.fullText = list[letter]!
    }

    var body: some View {
        VStack {
            Text("\(self.fullText)")
            TextField("Enter some text", text: $fullText)
        }
    }
}

And use this by simply calling inside your view

struct ContentView: View {
    var body: some View {
        StateFromOutside(letter: "a")
    }
}
0

You can create a view model and initiate the same as well :

 class LetterViewModel: ObservableObject {

     var fullText: String
     let listTemp = [
         "a": "Letter A",
         "b": "Letter B",
         // ...
     ]

     init(initialLetter: String) {
         fullText = listTemp[initialLetter] ?? ""
     }
 }

 struct LetterView: View {

     @State var viewmodel: LetterViewModel

     var body: some View {
    
         TextField("Enter text", text: $viewmodel.fullText)
     }
 }

And then call the view like this:

 struct ContentView: View {

     var body: some View {

           LetterView(viewmodel: LetterViewModel(initialLetter: "a"))
     }
 }

By this you would also not have to call the State instantiate method.

-2

See the .id(count) in the example code below.

import SwiftUI
import MapKit

struct ContentView: View {
    @State private var count = 0
    
    var body: some View {
        Button("Tap me") {
            self.count += 1
            print(count)
        }
        Spacer()
        testView(count: count).id(count) // <------ THIS IS IMPORTANT. Without this "id" the initializer setting affects the testView only once and calling testView again won't change it (not desirable, of course)
    }
}



struct testView: View {
    var count2: Int
    @State private var region: MKCoordinateRegion
    
    init(count: Int) {
        count2 = 2*count
        print("in testView: \(count)")
        
        let lon =  -0.1246402 + Double(count) / 100.0
        let lat =  51.50007773 + Double(count) / 100.0
        let myRegion = MKCoordinateRegion(center: CLLocationCoordinate2D(latitude: lat, longitude: lon) , span: MKCoordinateSpan(latitudeDelta: 0.01, longitudeDelta: 0.01))
        _region = State(initialValue: myRegion)
    }

    var body: some View {
        Map(coordinateRegion: $region, interactionModes: MapInteractionModes.all)
        Text("\(count2)")
    }
}
0

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