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swift-mode

Major-mode for Apple's Swift programming language.

Installation

Install swift-mode package from MELPA.

To install without MELPA, download latest release and execute M-x package-install-file for the .tar archive.

Features

This package does not provide flycheck. See flycheck-swift.

Limitations

Some syntax constructs removed from Swift 3.0 are not supported:

Indentation may not accurate. For example, foo(Bar < A, B > (c)) can be indented like either

foo(Bar < A,
    B > (c)) // Passing two Boolean arguments to foo

or

foo(Bar < A,
          B > (c)) // Passing a new Bar with two type arguments and a value

The Swift compiler disambiguates this case using tokens after >, but those tokens may not available at editing time. We use some heuristic for this.

Another example is difficulty of handling of colons. We have to pair all ? and : of conditional operators to decide indentation of the below snippet. This is a future work.

switch foo {
  case let P(x) where x is Foo? ? a ? b : c ?? d : e ? f : g :
    h ? i?.j() : k()
}

switch foo {
  case let P(x) where (x is Foo?) ? (a ? b : c ?? d) : (e ? f : g) :
    h ? i?.j() : k()
}

Yet another difficult case is consistency of blocks. We want to indent method chains like this:

var x = foo
  .then { x in
      aaa
  }
  .then { x in
      aaa
  }

while we also want to indent the body of if like this:

if anotherVeryLongVariableName
     .veryLongPropertyName {
    aaa
}

That is, we have to indent the closing brace with offset if it is a part of expressions while it should be aligned with the beginning of the statement/declaration if it is a part of a statement/declaration.

Then, how should we indent the following code when the cursor is before @?

var x = foo
  .bar {
    @

This could be

var x = foo
  .bar {
    @abc willSet {
        aaa
    }
}
// property declaration

or

var x = foo
  .bar {
      @abc var x = 1
      x
  }
// property initialization

Both are syntactically correct code. We cannot handle this case properly. This is also a future work.

Other example is regex literals and custom operators. The following example is valid Swift code with regex literals and custom operators.

let x = /^/ /^/ /^/

We parse them as regex literals rather than custom operators for now.

Hacking

To build the package locally, run make package.

To install the built package, run make install.

To run tests, run make test.

For other commands, run make help.

Related projects

Contributing

Yes, please do! See CONTRIBUTING for guidelines.

Acknowledgements

The REPL code is based on js-comint.

Thanks to the following original developer and users for their contributions:

You can find a full list of those people here.

Thanks to @purcell (Steve Purcell) for advices on the code and arrangement for merging swift3-mode and swift-mode.

License

GPLv3. See COPYING for details. Copyright (C) 2014-2021 taku0, Chris Barrett, Bozhidar Batsov, Arthur Evstifeev.