[swift-evolution] @NSCopying currently does not affect initializers

Torin Kwok torin at kwok.im
Wed Feb 1 01:34:06 CST 2017


I have given out a proposal about it: Compensate for the inconsistency of @NSCopying's behavior. Please give it some reviews. Thanks.

Best,
Torin




On Tue, Jan 31, 2017 at 2:34 PM +0800, "Torin Kwok via swift-evolution" <swift-evolution at swift.org> wrote:










Thanks Doug, I’m writing a proposal about it.

- Torin

> On 31 Jan 2017, at 07:20, Douglas Gregor  wrote:
> 
> 
>> On Jan 28, 2017, at 10:43 PM, Rod Brown via swift-evolution  wrote:
>> 
>> I agree that there is an issue here.
>> 
>> While I understand that the initialiser avoids the full setter for direct access, I would expect the attribute to mean that the substituted direct access still applied the attribute you marked the API with. I would consider the fact that it doesn't work as a dangerous gap in the API.
>> 
>> It is also concerning if we consider how this will work with Property Behaviours that are planned for Swift in the future. If we made NSCopying a property behaviour, the direct access would mean it too would not be invoked at initial access so I'm not sure how the best way to get around this is - should we do compiler magic to copy in the initialiser, or should we warn if we don't detect a call to copy() or copy(with:) in the initialiser?
> 
> I think we should be doing the compiler magic to call copy(with:) in the initializer, because that seems like the most direct way to maintain the @NSCopying contract without changing the underlying direct-storage model.
> 
>> I think we at least need to do something here. It's a very convoluted piece of logic to say the @NSCopying attribute doesn't work in an initialiser and it's hardly intuitive despite the fair reasoning.
> 
> I agree that we need to do something here. It feels like it’s just a bug—that this is the only way that @NSCopying makes sense in an attribute. Might even be a good starter bug for someone who wants to dip their tows into the type checker!
> 
> 	- Doug
> 
>> 
>> Rod
>> 
>>> On 29 Jan 2017, at 4:47 pm, Torin Kwok via swift-evolution  wrote:
>>> 
>>> Yep, I also admit the design of forbidding calling a setter before full
>>> class initialization is reasonable and what's really annoying is the
>>> inconsistency.
>>> 
>>> However, making @NSCopying attribute not subjects to the fact that
>>> setters would not be invoked in initializers perhaps is viable too. In
>>> the other words, assigning a value to a property whether or not by
>>> calling a setter has no influence on whether @NSCopying semantic'd work:
>>> copying should always take place after a property has been declared as
>>> @NSCopying.
>>> 
>>> Jean-Daniel writes:
>>> 
>>>>> Le 28 janv. 2017 à 05:34, Torin Kwok via swift-evolution  a écrit :
>>>>> 
>>>>> Hello guys,
>>>>> 
>>>>> Note: This issue has been originally presented inswift-usersmailling list . And then I post it again here at the suggestion  of Jordan Rose:
>>>>> 
>>>>> It might be reasonable to change this behavior, but it probably deserves a bit of discussion on swift-evolution; it's not 100%, for-sure a bug.
>>>>> --- the original content follows this line ---
>>>>> 
>>>>> I encountered a strange behavior when I declared a property with the @NSCopying attribute:
>>>>> 
>>>>> // `Person` class inherits from `NSObject` class and conforms to `NSCopying` protocol
>>>>> @NSCopying var employee: Person
>>>>> and then assigned an external instance of Person class protocol to this property within the designated init methods:
>>>>> 
>>>>> // Designated initializer of `Department` class
>>>>> init( employee externalEmployee: Person ) {
>>>>> self.employee = externalEmployee
>>>>> super.init()
>>>>> 
>>>>> // Assertion would fail since Swift do not actually copy the value assigned to this property         
>>>>> // even though `self.employee` has been marked as `@NSCoyping`
>>>>> // assert( self.employee !== externalEmployee )
>>>>> }
>>>>> If I indeed require the deep copying behavior during the init process, instead of taking advantage of @NSCopying attribute, I would have to invoke the copy() method manually:
>>>>> 
>>>>> init( employee externalEmployee: Person ) {
>>>>> // ...
>>>>> self.employee = externalEmployee.copy() as! Person  
>>>>> // ...
>>>>> }
>>>>> In fact, what really makes me confusing is that @NSCopying semantic does work properly within the other parts of the class definition such as normal instance methods, or external scope. For instance, if we're assigning an external instance of Person to the self.employee proper of Department directly through setter rather than initializer:
>>>>> 
>>>>> department.employee = johnAppleseed
>>>>> then self.employee property and johnAppleseed variable will no longer share the same underlying object now. In the other words, @NSCopying attribute makes sense.
>>>>> 
>>>>> After I looked through a great deal of results given by Google, and dicussions on StackOverflow, I finally end up with nothing helpful — the vast majority of articles, documentations as well as issues talking about this similar topics only focus on the basic concepts and effects of @NSCopying itself but do not mentioned this strange behavior at all — besides one radar descriping the same problem (rdar://21383959 ) and a final conclusion mentioned in a guy's Gist comment: ... values set during initialization are not cloned ...
>>>>> 
>>>>> That is, @NSCopying semantic has no effect in initializers.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Then, what I want to figure out is the reason why @NSCopying semantic will become effectless implicitly whithin initializers of a class, and the special considerations behind this behavior, if any.
>>>>> 
>>>>> --- END ---
>>>>> 
>>>>> Jordan:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Your observation is correct: @NSCopying currently does not affect initializers. This is because accessing a property in an initializer always does direct access to the storage rather than going through the setter.
>>>>> I have tested the identical logic in Objective-C and the NSCopying semantic works perfectly within Obj-C's class initializer.
>>>>> 
>>>> This is because Obj-C guarantee that all ivars are zero initialized and does not enforce initializer safety (but forcing initialization of ivars before calling other methods).
>>>> 
>>>> Calling a setter (like any other method) before full class initialization is unsafe as the setter may be overridden or simply customized, and may need to access to the class or subclasses ivars.
>>>> 
>>>> That said, I’m not sure what is the best way to solve that inconsistency.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> -- 
>>> Torin Kwok (郭桐)
>>> OpenPGP/GnuPG: https://keybase.io/kwok
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