Class A provides a string value. Class B has two members of A type inside itself, and provide a computed property "v" to choose one of them.
class A {
var value: String
init(value: String) {
self.value = value
}
}
class B {
var v1: A?
var v2: A = A(value: "2")
private var v: A {
return v1 ?? v2
}
var value: String {
get {
return v.value
}
set {
v.value = newValue
}
}
}
This code is simple and it works. Since both the A and B have a member "value", I make it a protocol like this:
protocol ValueProvider {
var value: String {get set}
}
class A: ValueProvider {
var value: String
init(value: String) {
self.value = value
}
}
class B: ValueProvider {
var v1: ValueProvider?
var v2: ValueProvider = A(value: "2")
private var v: ValueProvider {
return v1 ?? v2
}
var value: String {
get {
return v.value
}
set {
v.value = newValue // Error: Cannot assign to the result of the expression
}
}
}
If I change the following code
v.value = newValue
to
var v = self.v
v.value = newValue
It works again!
Is this a bug of Swift, or something special for the property of protocols?
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