The answers I've seen so far (1, 2, 3) recommend using GCD's dispatch_once
thus:
var token: dispatch_once_t = 0
func test() {
dispatch_once(&token) {
print("This is printed only on the first call to test()")
}
print("This is printed for each call to test()")
}
test()
Output:
This is printed only on the first call to test()
This is printed for each call to test()
But wait a minute. token
is a variable, so I could easily do this:
var token: dispatch_once_t = 0
func test() {
dispatch_once(&token) {
print("This is printed only on the first call to test()")
}
print("This is printed for each call to test()")
}
test()
token = 0
test()
Output:
This is printed only on the first call to test()
This is printed for each call to test()
This is printed only on the first call to test()
This is printed for each call to test()
So dispatch_once
is of no use if we I can change the value of token
! And turning token
into a constant is not straightforward as it needs to of type UnsafeMutablePointer<dispatch_once_t>
.
So should we give up on dispatch_once
in Swift? Is there a safer way to execute code just once?
See Question&Answers more detail:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…