The problem with your code is that 0 ..< list.count
is executed once at the beginning of the loop, when list
still has all of its elements. Each time you remove one element, list.count
is decremented, but the iteration range is not modified. You end up reading too far.
In Swift 4.1 and above, you can use compactMap
to discard the nil
elements of a sequence. compactMap
returns an array of non-optional values.
let list: [Foo?] = ...
let nonNilElements = list.compactMap { $0 }
If you still want an array of optionals, you can use filter
to remove nil
elements:
list = list.filter { $0 != nil }
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