- Proposal: SE-0031
- Authors: Joe Groff, Erica Sadun
- Status: Accepted for Swift 3 (Rationale)
- Review manager: Chris Lattner
The inout
keyword indicates copy-in/copy-out argument behavior. In its current implementation the keyword prepends argument names. We propose to move the inout
keyword to the right side of the colon to decorate the type instead of the parameter label.
The initial Swift-Evolution discussion of this topic took place in the "Replace 'inout' with &" thread.
In Swift 2, the inout
parameter lives on the label side rather than the type side of the colon
although the keyword isn't modifying the label but its type. Decorating
types instead of labels offers identifiable advantages:
-
It enables the
inout
keyword to properly integrate into full type syntax, for example:(x: inout T) -> U // => (inout T) -> U
-
It avoids notational similarity with arguments labeled
inout
, for example:func foo(inOut x: T) // foo(inOut:), type (T) -> Void func foo(inout x: T) // foo(_:), type (inout T) -> Void
-
Moving it would allow
inout
to be used as a parameter label. While this isn't a particularly strong motivation by itself, currentlyinout
is the only keyword not allowed as a parameter label in Swift 3. Removing this restriction would simplify the language. -
It better matches similar patterns in other languages such as borrowing in Rust, that may be later introduced back to Swift
parameter → external-parameter-name optlocal-parameter-name : type-annotation
type-annotation → inout type-annotation
Decorations using @inout
(either @inout(T)
or @inout T
) were considered and discarded