I have a custom object called Field. I basically use it to define a single field in a form.
class Field {
var name: String
var value: Any?
// initializers here...
}
When the user submits the form, I validate each of the Field
objects to make sure they contain valid values. Some fields aren't required so I sometimes deliberately set nil
to the value
property like this:
field.value = nil
This seems to pose a problem when I use an if-let to determine whether a field is nil or not.
if let value = field.value {
// The field has a value, ignore it...
} else {
// Add field.name to the missing fields array. Later, show the
// missing fields in a dialog.
}
I set breakpoints in the above if-else and when field.value
has been deliberately set to nil, it goes through the if-let block, not the else. However, for the fields whose field.value
I left uninitialized and unassigned, the program goes to the else block.
I tried printing out field.value
and value
inside the if-let block:
if let value = field.value {
NSLog("field.value: (field.value), value: (value)")
}
And this is what I get:
field.value: Optional(nil), value: nil
So I thought that maybe with optionals, it's one thing to be uninitialized and another to have the value of nil. But even adding another if inside the if-let won't make the compiler happy:
if let value = field.value {
if value == nil { // Cannot invoke '==' with an argument list of type '(Any, NilLiteralConvertible)'
}
}
How do I get around this? I just want to check if the field.value
is nil
.
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