40

In my project, after converting to swift 3, a new function appeared before my ViewController class:

fileprivate func < <T : Comparable>(lhs: T?, rhs: T?) -> Bool {
   switch (lhs, rhs) {
  case let (l?, r?):
    return l < r
  case (nil, _?):
    return true
  default:
    return false
  }
}

What does this function do? Why do I need it?

Bright
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1 Answers1

45

That is interesting. Before the latest Swift 3, you could compare optional values, for example

let a: Int? = nil
let b: Int? = 4

print(a < b) // true

and nil was considered less than all non-optional values.

This feature has been removed (SE-0121 – Remove Optional Comparison Operators) and the above code would fail to compile in Xcode 8 beta 6 with

error: value of optional type 'Int?' not unwrapped; did you mean to use '!' or '?'?

Apparently, the Swift migrator solves that problem for you by providing a custom < operator which takes two optional operands and therefore "restores" the old behavior.

If you remove that definition then you should see where the comparison is done in your code. Then try to update your code and remove the optional comparisons.

Martin R
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  • So that basically means in most cases I can simply remove it? I don't need to compare nil to optionals. – Bright Aug 31 '16 at 13:41
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    @BrightFuture: In my experience, Xcode adds that only if it is needed somewhere. Try to remove it and see what happens. – Martin R Aug 31 '16 at 13:42