[swift-evolution] Allowing `guard let self = self else { ... }` for weakly captured self in a closure.
Jordan Rose
jordan_rose at apple.com
Fri Jan 22 19:54:17 CST 2016
> On Jan 22, 2016, at 17:51, Chris Lattner <clattner at apple.com> wrote:
>
>
>> On Jan 5, 2016, at 8:21 PM, Christopher Rogers via swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org> wrote:
>>
>> You can shadow self with a guard like you wrote it if use the keyword escaping backquotes like so:
>>
>> guard let `self` = self else { return }
>
> To confirm what others have said down thread, this is a compiler bug: this code is valid, but shouldn’t change what references to “self.method()” or “method()" bind to (i.e., explicit or implicit references to self).
>
> Backquotes are for forming a name that happens to overlap with a keyword. In the case of `self`, this could be because you want to refer to the NSObject.`self` method for some reason. Backquotes are not a way to name self, init, subscript or any of the other declarations that look like magic identifiers.
…which we ought to fix by not reusing Identifier data for the keywords. ;-)
Jordan
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