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I wanted to create an app that organizes and displays the data I want in a fandom wiki for me, so I downloaded Swift Playgrounds on an iPad Pro, finished all the tutorials, and I’m working on it now. I’m already decently familiar with C/C++/C#, Java, Python, and a couple other languages (not Objective-C), but the Swift tutorials only really covered the basics and Views, and didn’t really get into the unique Swift coding. Although I could manually input all the data and make the app work faster and offline, that’d be a huge pain, and the data on the wiki could change as the game updates.

I’ve searched for how here and with general web searches for several other sites, but not a single one of the methods described worked and provided me with something usable. Some old Objective-C guides indicated base capabilities of sorting webpage source data and generating tables (arrays of arrays) of Strings with data from a webpage table, but I couldn’t find anything on a Swift equivalent. Thus I’m assuming I’ll have to write my own sorting functions. I wont have trouble with that so long as I can get a String with the up to date source code from the webpage, but that’s the part I can’t seem to get.

Of all the methods I saw and tried (all of which failed) I like this one the best:

var source = String(contentsOf: URL(string: String)!, encoding: .ascii)

Where String is the copy-pasted URL in quotation marks.

I get an error saying it can throw, and that that’s not allowed in a property initializer, and I’d like a way around that, but even if I have:

let address = URL(string: String)
var source = String(contentsOf: address, encoding: .ascii)

It tells me, “Cannot use instance member ‘address’ within property initializer; property initializer run before ‘self’ is available.” If I separate the String out to a let above that one the error comes up on the second let. The Swift tutorials didn’t even explain what the difference between let and var was, but through past error messages I’m guessing let is a “const var.” Regardless of which I use the error doesn’t change.

This one provided me with a useless String containing "application/octet-stream", but was the only one that didn’t cause an error:

var resources = UTType(filenameExtension: URL(string: String)!.pathExtension)?.preferredMIMEType ?? "application/octet-stream"

I’ve never seen ?? before so I had to look that up. My understanding is that it’s an operator in Swift used to identify a default for if the other is nil, but let me know if I’m wrong. I don’t understand the UTType or MIMEType very well either.

The tutorials also didn’t explain the ? and ! in these kinds of uses. I would have guessed pointers, but given the use of var and rumors I’ve heard I think Swift is more like C# with the whole lack of pointers. If not pointers (data vs memory address) then I’m guessing there’s like a “raw” and “stable” form based on past errors I’ve gotten. Where ? brings it down to the “raw” form and ! brings it up to the “stable” form.

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    “ I would have guessed pointers ” There’s no need to guess. I’d suggest you read The Swift Programming Language
    – Alexander
    Jun 6, 2022 at 23:06
  • So what appears to be an unofficial guide to Swift is going to better than the 60 hours of Swift coding tutorial and 10 hours of Swift UI tutorials provided by Apple that I already did?
    – Pål Hart
    Jun 6, 2022 at 23:16
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    @PålHart Look at the domain. The Swift Programming Language ("TSPL") isn't some random blog, it's the de-facto canonical introductory material for learning the language. Other Apple resources typically focus on their particular frameworks, and typically assume familiarity with the lang.
    – Alexander
    Jun 6, 2022 at 23:52
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    @PålHart Don't be so quick to dismiss things you don't understand, there are good reasons for it that you just don't appreciate yet. Maybe you never will, but you have to be open to it. They're not called "wrapped" and "unwrapped". It's a data type called Optional (well it's generic, so formally, Optional<Wrapped>). It must be a decent idea, because Rust, C#, Java, Python and C++ have all introduced it in some flavor or another.
    – Alexander
    Jun 6, 2022 at 23:54
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    See also: "the blub paradox": "... But when our hypothetical Blub programmer looks in the other direction, up the power continuum, he doesn't realize he's looking up. What he sees are merely weird languages. He probably considers them about equivalent in power to Blub, but with all this other hairy stuff thrown in as well. Blub is good enough for him, because he thinks in Blub."
    – Alexander
    Jun 6, 2022 at 23:56

1 Answer 1

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I fixed the code, and figured out a solution to the minor annoyance at the same time.

var data = (try? String(contentsOf: URL(string: String)!))!

The “Cannot use instance member ‘address’ within property initializer; property initializer run before ‘self’ is available” error is fixed by not having a separate variable for the URL; which I thought having was annoying anyway. Using try? converts the value to nil if an error is thrown, fixing the limitation of throws not being allowed in the property initializer. This outputs the wrapped (what I referred to as “raw” in the original post; due to not knowing the terminology yet) version of the datatype, so I have to convert it to the unwrapped (what I referred to as “stable” in the original post) version of the datatype in order to use it.

I think a better/cleaner solution than the concept of wrapped and unwrapped optional datatypes would be designing methods to be able to handle throws, but I guess inventing problems to have solutions for is just how Swift rolls. I also noticed that despite what the guides indicated, the encoding does not need to be specified for what I need to accomplish. I should be able to finish the rest of it now.

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