> In the past bare strings were acceptable for postNotificationName and
> addObserverForName. Yet now constructing a Notification and
> Notification.Name seem to be a bit unwieldy. Example:
>
> let ConnectedNotification =
> Notification(name:Notification.Name(rawValue:"ConnectedNotification"))
>
> That seems to be quite convoluted and I'm not sure why there isn't a
> convenience init that allows for
>
> let ConnectedNotification = Notification(name:"ConnectedNotification")
You're running into trouble because you're not following the typical pattern
for these types. The intended usage is:
* You assign the Notification.Name to a constant.
class ChatConnection {
static let didConnect =
Notification.Name("ChatConnection.didConnect")
…
}
* You create Notification instances on demand, or preferably let the
NotificationCenter make them for you.
extension ChatConnection {
func connectionCompleted() {
NotificationCenter.default().post(name:
ChatConnection.didConnect, object: self)
}
}
Individual Notifications are meant to be one-off instances. If you follow this
pattern, you'll find that the API design suddenly makes a lot more sense!
--
Brent Royal-Gordon
Architechies
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