Thinking in Swift, Part 3: Struct vs. Class



Continuing my “Thinking in Swift” article series, today we’ll do a simple change that will simplify our code again: using a struct.

This post is part of an article series. You can read all the parts here: part 1, part 1 addendum, part 2, part 3, part 4

Previously

In the previous article of this series, we learned about using map and flatMap on arrays, which avoid statefulness in the form of intermediate variables and make us use some functional programming instead1.

As a reminder, here is what the code looked like at the end of our previous work:

class ListItem {
    var icon: UIImage?
    var title: String = ""
    var url: NSURL!
    
    static func listItemsFromJSONData(jsonData: NSData?) -> [ListItem] {
        guard let nonNilJsonData = jsonData,
            let json = try? NSJSONSerialization.JSONObjectWithData(nonNilJsonData, options: []),
            let jsonItems = json as? Array<NSDictionary>
            else {
                return []
        }
        
        return jsonItems.flatMap { (itemDesc: NSDictionary) -> ListItem? in
            guard let title = itemDesc["title"] as? String,
                let urlString = itemDesc["url"] as? String,
                let url = NSURL(string: urlString)
                else { return nil }
            let li = ListItem()
            if let icon = itemDesc["icon"] as? String {
                li.icon = UIImage(named: icon)
            }
            li.title = title
            li.url = url
            return li
        }
    }
}

Today we’ll just do a really simple change but which will make our code thinner and Swift-er again.

Struct vs Class

One other mistake that our newcomer to Swift did in the above code, is to start with a class. That’s understandable, because in ObjC we use classes everywhere.

There is nothing wrong with class. You can still use them with Swift of course. But in Swift, struct are way more powerful as their C counterpart: they are no more limited to just a set of fields holding some values.

Instead, Swift’s structs have quite the same capabilities as classes — except inheritance — but instead are value-types (so copied every time you pass them in another variable, much like Int for example) whereas classes are reference-types, passed by reference instead of being copied, like in Objective-C (and its ugly * all over the place)

I won’t start a big post here about using struct and value types vs class and reference types: I rather strongly suggest that you watch this excellent talk from Andy Matuschak on that subject. No need to explain it myself, I won’t do better than Andy here!

Converting our class to a struct

In our case, a struct seems more appropriate because it carries values, and is not intended to be mutated (and rather copied than referenced). We’ll use them as sources for a menu for example, and they are not intended to be modified once created anyway, so this is one case where it makes sense.

Also, the advantage of migrating to a struct here is that they have an implicit constructor by default if you don’t define any: so we can easily build a ListItem using its default constructor ListItem(icon: …, title: …, url: …).

Last but not least, as we now can’t create a bogus ListItem because we eliminated the problem of data corruption above, we can eliminate the default value "" for title, but more importantly we can save that last pony 🐴 by transforming NSURL! into NSURL2.

So here is what it looks like:

struct ListItem {
    var icon: UIImage?
    var title: String
    var url: NSURL
    
    static func listItemsFromJSONData(jsonData: NSData?) -> [ListItem] {
        guard let nonNilJsonData = jsonData,
            let json = try? NSJSONSerialization.JSONObjectWithData(nonNilJsonData, options: []),
            let jsonItems = json as? Array<NSDictionary> else { return [] }
        
        return jsonItems.flatMap { (itemDesc: NSDictionary) -> ListItem? in
            guard let title = itemDesc["title"] as? String,
                let urlString = itemDesc["url"] as? String,
                let url = NSURL(string: urlString)
                else { return nil }
            let iconName = itemDesc["icon"] as? String
            let icon = UIImage(named: iconName ?? "")
            return ListItem(icon: icon, title: title, url: url)
        }
    }
}

Now we only create our ListItem instance as the last step, once we have everything, because structs provide a default init taking all its fields as parameters if you don’t provide any init yourself. We could have done the same with our class version, but with a class we’d have had to declare the init ourselves.

Coalescing operator

In the above example, I also used a new trick, using the ?? operator to give a default value in case iconName is nil.

This ?? operator a little similar to ObjC’s opt ?: val expression, for those who know it: opt ?? val will return the value of opt if it’s non-nil, and val if opt was nil. That means that if opt is of type T?, val has to be of type T, and so will the result of the whole expression be.

So here iconName ?? "" allows us to use an empty "" image name in case iconName is nil, which we know will lead to a nil UIImage (and icon = nil) in such case.

⚠️ Note ⚠️: That’s NOT the best and clean way to handle a nil iconName and have a nil UIImage as a result. In fact, it even seems a bit ugly and cheaty to use a fake "" name to have an empty image. But that was an occasion to show you the existence of this ?? operator… and hey, let’s also keep some nice stuff for the next part of this article series 😉 (Spoiler: it involves flatMap again).

Conclusion

I’ll stop here for today.

We didn’t do much in this part 3, just changing a class into a struct. I didn’t even scratch the surface about the difference between the two here (but even if I have been pretty busy lately and didn’t post anything on my blog for a while, I didn’t want to make you wait too much for a new article).

But we saved that last pony by getting rid of that last NSURL! at last 🎉. And you’ve plenty of stuff to read and learn already by watching Andy’s great talk about «Making Friends with Value Types» until my next part anyway 😃.

I promise I’m not going to wait that long before posting part 4, which will be about map and flatMap again, but this time on Optionals.

  1. Yes, you did some functional programming in the last article… probably even without knowing it already! 

  2. That NSURL! was bogging me for some time now, and was still there only because I was too lazy creating a proper init method for our ListItem class, and didn’t want to clobber the sample code before by dealing with it as I knew we’d get rid of it eventually. It’s about time we saved that last pony!Â