How would you express a decrementing indexed loop in Swift 3.0, where the syntax below is not valid any more?
for var index = 10 ; index > 0; index-=1{
print(index)
}
// 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
How would you express a decrementing indexed loop in Swift 3.0, where the syntax below is not valid any more?
for var index = 10 ; index > 0; index-=1{
print(index)
}
// 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Here is an easier (and more Swifty) approach.
for i in (0 ..< 5).reversed() {
print(i) // 4,3,2,1,0
}
let array = ["a", "b", "c", "d", "e"]
for element in array.reversed() {
print(element) // e,d,c,b,a
}
array.reversed().forEach { print($0) } // e,d,c,b,a
print(Array(array.reversed())) // e,d,c,b,a
C-style loops with a fixed increment or decrement can be replaced
by stride():
for index in 10.stride(to: 0, by: -1) {
print(index)
}
// 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Use stride(to: ...) or stride(through: ...) depending on whether
the last element should be included or not.
This is for Swift 2. The syntax changed (again) for Swift 3, see this answer.
From swift 3.0, The stride(to:by:) method on Strideable has been replaced with a free function, stride(from:to:by:)
for index in stride(from: 10, to: 0, by: -1) {
print(index)
}
// You can also use stride condition like
// {Some Value}.stride(to: 0, by: -1)
// for index in 10.stride(to: 0, by: -1) { }
You can use stride method:
10.stride(through: 0, by: -1).forEach { print($0) }
or classic while loop.
If you still want to use this C-style loop, here is what you need:
let x = 10
infix operator ..> { associativity left }
func ..>(left: Int, right: Int) -> StrideTo<Int> {
return stride(from: left, to: right, by: -1)
}
for i in x..>0 {
print(i)
}