This has been fixed in Swift 4
let data = ["a": 0, "b": 42]
let filtered = data.filter { $0.value > 10 }
print(filtered) // ["b": 42]
In Swift 4, a filtered dictionary returns a dictionary.
Original answer for Swift 2 and 3
The problem is that data
is a dictionary but the result of filter
is an array, so the error message says that you can't assign the result of the latter to the former.
You could just create a new variable/constant for your resulting array:
let data: [String: String] = [:]
let filtered = data.filter { $0.1 == "Test" }
Here filtered
is an array of tuples: [(String, String)]
.
Once filtered, you can recreate a new dictionary if this is what you need:
var newData = [String:String]()
for result in filtered {
newData[result.0] = result.1
}
If you decide not to use filter
you could mutate your original dictionary or a copy of it:
var data = ["a":"Test", "b":"nope"]
for (key, value) in data {
if value != "Test" {
data.removeValueForKey(key)
}
}
print(data) // ["a": "Test"]
Note: in Swift 3, removeValueForKey
has been renamed removeValue(forKey:)
, so in this example it becomes data.removeValue(forKey: key)
.
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