I have the following class:
class ReportView: NSView {
var categoriesPerPage = [[Int]]()
var numPages: Int = { return categoriesPerPage.count }
}
<
Your initial problem was:
class ReportView: NSView {
var categoriesPerPage = [[Int]]()
var numPages: Int = { return categoriesPerPage.count }
}
Instance member 'categoriesPerPage' cannot be used on type 'ReportView'
previous posts correctly point out, if you want a computed property, the =
sign is errant.
Additional possibility for error:
If your intent was to "Setting a Default Property Value with a Closure or Function", you need only slightly change it as well. (Note: this example was obviously not intended to do that)
class ReportView: NSView {
var categoriesPerPage = [[Int]]()
var numPages: Int = { return categoriesPerPage.count }()
}
Instead of removing the =
, we add ()
to denote a default initialization closure. (This can be useful when initializing UI code, to keep it all in one place.)
However, the exact same error occurs:
Instance member 'categoriesPerPage' cannot be used on type 'ReportView'
The problem is trying to initialize one property with the value of another. One solution is to make the initializer lazy
. It will not be executed until the value is accessed.
class ReportView: NSView {
var categoriesPerPage = [[Int]]()
lazy var numPages: Int = { return categoriesPerPage.count }()
}
now the compiler is happy!
For anyone else who stumbles on this make sure you're not attempting to modify the class rather than the instance! (unless you've declared the variable as static)
eg.
MyClass.variable = 'Foo' // WRONG! - Instance member 'variable' cannot be used on type 'MyClass'
instanceOfMyClass.variable = 'Foo' // Right!
I kept getting the same error inspite of making the variable static
.
Solution: Clean Build, Clean Derived Data, Restart Xcode. Or shortcut
Cmd + Shift+Alt+K
UserNotificationCenterWrapper.delegate = self
public static var delegate: UNUserNotificationCenterDelegate? {
get {
return UNUserNotificationCenter.current().delegate
}
set {
UNUserNotificationCenter.current().delegate = newValue
}
}
You just have syntax error when saying = {return self.someValue}
. The =
isn't needed.
Use :
var numPages: Int {
get{
return categoriesPerPage.count
}
}
if you want get only you can write
var numPages: Int {
return categoriesPerPage.count
}
with the first way you can also add observers as set
willSet
& didSet
var numPages: Int {
get{
return categoriesPerPage.count
}
set(v){
self.categoriesPerPage = v
}
}
allowing to use = operator
as a setter
myObject.numPages = 5
Sometimes Xcode when overrides methods adds class func
instead of just func
. Then in static method you can't see instance properties. It is very easy to overlook it. That was my case.
It is saying you have an instance variable (the var is only visible/accessible when you have an instance of that class) and you are trying to use it in the context of a static scope (class method).
You can make your instance variable a class variable by adding static/class attribute.
You instantiate an instance of your class and call the instance method on that variable.