- Proposal: SE-0186
- Author: Greg Spiers
- Review Manager: Ted Kremenek
- Status: Implemented (Swift 4.1)
- Implementation: apple/swift#11744
- Review thread on swift-evolution
- Bug: SR-479
- Decision Notes: Rationale
This proposal removes support for the keywords weak
and unowned
for property declarations in a protocol.
Swift-evolution thread: Ownership on protocol property requirements thread.
Currently it's possible to use the weak/unowned keywords for a property requirement in a protocol. This can lead to confusion as specifying one of these keywords does not enforce or raise any warnings in the adopting type of that protocol:
class A {}
protocol P {
weak var weakVar: A? { get set }
}
class B: P {
var weakVar: A? // Not declared weak, no compiler warning/error
}
This can lead to unexpected and surprising behaviour from the point of view of users. The keywords themselves are currently meaningless inside of a protocol but look like they would have an effect when the protocol is adopted.
This change is consistent with removing keywords that do not have any meaning like final
in protocol extensions: SE-0164.
Although the case could be made that the keywords should have meaning in a protocol, as they are currently implemented today they don't have an effect. This proposal aims to cleanup the misleading syntax and isn't meant to remove functionality only correct to existing behaviour.
This proposal suggests removing support for weak
and unowned
in a protocol.
In existing Swift modes, 3 and 4, the compiler will warn about the use of weak
and unowned
in a protocol and suggest a fix to remove the keywords. In Swift 5 mode the compiler will error and offer a fixit to remove the keywords.
This is a source breaking change but one that would only correct code that already has broken assumptions. For existing Swift modes, 3 and 4, the compiler will raise a compilation warning instead of an error.
This proposal does not affect ABI stability.
This proposal does not affect API resilience.
There is an argument in making weak
and unowned
have meaning in a protocol but this does open up other questions and is probably better as a topic of a separate discussion/proposal. As this would be additive it can be addressed at a later point when we have a clearer understanding.