What is the “Swift Language Version” Xcode setting for? Because it still builds newer Swift code with an older version set

后端 未结 1 1488
臣服心动
臣服心动 2021-01-05 21:09

I\'m building source code using an Xcode project that has its \"Swift Language Version\" set to \"Swift 4.\" Even with this set, the project builds Swift 5.1 source code lik

1条回答
  •  有刺的猬
    2021-01-05 21:21

    Prior to Swift 4, the version of the compiler and the language were one and the same. But since Swift 4, the compiler can run in a compatibility mode for previous Swift versions. check more info on compatibility modes in the Swift 4.0 release notes

    The Xcode build setting SWIFT_VERSION set's the compiler flag -swift-version which is the language mode. From the swift compiler print out below this parameter only changes how the input is interpreted.

    swiftc -h|grep 'Swift language version number'
      -swift-version    Interpret input according to a specific Swift language version number
    

    Thus When you select Swift Language Version to 4.2, this does not mean use Swift 4.2 compiler. The compiler version will still be 5.1.3, the Swift Language Version setting instructs the compiler to run in Swift 4.2 compatibility mode. The compatibility mode means you may not need to modify your swift 4.2 code to use the new version of the compiler. Because the compiler running in compatibility mode allows Swift version 4.2 code to compile and run alongside code from version 5 and later.

    The Swift 5 compiler with compatibility mode can compile code written with either Swift 4 syntax, Swift 4.2 syntax, or Swift 5 syntax.

    Here is a code example, create a file test.swift with code below:

    //code written before siwft 5
    let firstName = "michael jackson"
    let offset = firstName.endIndex.encodedOffset
    
    // Check swift version being used.
    #if swift(>=5.2)
    print("Hello, Swift 5.2")
    
    #elseif swift(>=5.1)
    print("Hello, Swift 5.1")
    
    #elseif swift(>=5.0)
    print("Hello, Swift 5.0")
    
    #elseif swift(>=4.2)
    print("Hello, Swift 4.2")
    
    #elseif swift(>=4.1)
    print("Hello, Swift 4.1")
    
    #elseif swift(>=4.0)
    print("Hello, Swift 4.0")
    
    #endif
    

    suppose the above code was written before swift 5 using the swift 4 compiler this code will compile with no error's as shown below.

    After swift 5 is released if you try to compile this code with Swift 5 compiler as shown below.

    You will get the warning shown above since encodedOffset is deprecated in swift 5.

    You could downgrade and use the swift 4 compiler or you can use the Swift 5 compiler in compatibility mode with the compiler flag -swift-version as shown below.

    It's important to note that Swift 4 compiler, and the Swift 5 compiler in Swift-4 compatibility mode are not the same thing. New swift 5 language features are normally available to the swift 5 compiler running compatibility mode. This allows developers to use the new features even when they can't upgrade to swift 5. The new Swift 5 features will not be available to the Swift 4 compiler.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题