[swift-evolution] [Review] SE-0159: Fix Private Access Levels

Matthew Johnson matthew at anandabits.com
Sun Mar 26 07:30:12 CDT 2017



Sent from my iPad

> On Mar 26, 2017, at 4:13 AM, John McCall via swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org> wrote:
> 
>> On Mar 26, 2017, at 4:27 AM, Goffredo Marocchi <panajev at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> On 26 Mar 2017, at 06:54, John McCall via swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> On Mar 25, 2017, at 2:11 AM, Carl Brown1 via swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org> wrote:
>>>> Yes, it would change my opinion of it. I wouldn't become a strong supporter because I don't see any value in it, but a rigorous proof that this proposal could not possibly introduce regressions to any existing codebases would change my opinion from "strongly against" to "doesn't matter to me, I'll stop arguing against it and go get my real work done".
>>>> 
>>> Speaking just for myself, this was a key part of why I was attracted to this proposal: it seemed to me to be extremely unlikely to cause regressions in behavior.  Even without any special behavior in the migrator, code will mostly work exactly as before: things that would have been invalid before will become valid, but not the other way around.  The exception is that old-private declarations from scopes in the same file can now be found by lookups in different scopes (but still only within the same file).  It should be quite straightforward for the migrator to detect when this has happened and report it as something for the programmer to look at.  The proposal causes a small regression in functionality, in that there's no longer any way to protect scopes from accesses within the file, but (1) it's okay for Swift to be opinionated about file size and (2) it seems to me that a workable sub-module proposal should solve that more elegantly while simultaneously addressing the concerns of the people who dislike acknowledging the existence of files.
>> 
>> The opinionated flag sometimes, like being Swifty, is being used to swath away disagreement, but opinions should be reasonable and pragmatic too... opinionated as "you will code this way and you will like it" seems hardly ideal too if abused constantly. Programming is a creative endeavour too.
>> 
>> Also, removing a feature that is used and is useful because "maybe" a year or more away there could be a feature that may address the concerns of the people we are stripping away the current feature from seems quite harsh and unfriendly at best... not very logical either.
> 
> Scoped-private is not some awesomely expressive feature.  It's an access restriction.  The "opinion" I'm talking about hardly prevents you from coding however you like.  It's just this: organizing your code into smaller, more self-contained components separated by file is good practice anyway, and when you do that, Swift will let you enforce that each component is properly encapsulated.

This does not address the case where we have a small helper type that is only 10s of lines long, is not visible outside the file, and encapsulates an important part of the implementation using scoped private.  The whole file is usually only a couple hundred lines.  This is not an excessively long file and already contains a single component that is presented to the rest of the program.

Some designs of submodules might allow us to properly encapsulate everything but if that requires us to put a small helper type in a separate file that would be a very unfortunate and inflexible constraint on how we are able to organize our code. 

 I don't want encapsulation concerns dictating how I physically organize my code.  That is significant and unnecessary complexity if you ask me.  It forces a tradeoff between desired physical organization and desired encapsulation.  We should not force users to make this tradeoff.

> 
> John.
> 
>> 
>>> 
>>> John.
>>>> -Carl
>>>> 
>>>> <graycol.gif>Xiaodi Wu ---03/25/2017 12:33:55 AM---Would it change your opinion on the proposal? On Sat, Mar 25, 2017 at 12:10 AM, Carl Brown1 <Carl.Br
>>>> 
>>>> From: Xiaodi Wu <xiaodi.wu at gmail.com>
>>>> To: Carl Brown1/US/IBM at IBM
>>>> Cc: Drew Crawford <drew at sealedabstract.com>, Jonathan Hull <jhull at gbis.com>, swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org>
>>>> Date: 03/25/2017 12:33 AM
>>>> Subject: Re: [swift-evolution] [Review] SE-0159: Fix Private Access Levels
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Would it change your opinion on the proposal?
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> On Sat, Mar 25, 2017 at 12:10 AM, Carl Brown1 <Carl.Brown1 at ibm.com> wrote:
>>>> I would very much like to see your proof that the resultant code is unchanged in an arbitrary codebase. 
>>>> 
>>>> -Carl
>>>> 
>>>> <graycol.gif>Xiaodi Wu ---03/25/2017 12:01:26 AM---On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 11:55 PM, Carl Brown1 <Carl.Brown1 at ibm.com> wrote: > Maybe this is the core
>>>> 
>>>> From: Xiaodi Wu <xiaodi.wu at gmail.com>
>>>> To: Carl Brown1/US/IBM at IBM
>>>> Cc: Drew Crawford <drew at sealedabstract.com>, Jonathan Hull <jhull at gbis.com>, swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org>
>>>> Date: 03/25/2017 12:01 AM
>>>> Subject: Re: [swift-evolution] [Review] SE-0159: Fix Private Access Levels
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 11:55 PM, Carl Brown1 <Carl.Brown1 at ibm.com> wrote:
>>>> My point is that, in rolling back the specific portion of SE-0025, case-sensitive find-and-replace will be the trickiest thing in most codebases, save those that result in invalid redeclarations. The behavior of the resultant code is, unless I'm mistaken, provably unchanged.
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
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