> On Nov 12, 2017, at 11:11 PM, Brent Royal-Gordon via swift-evolution
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On Nov 12, 2017, at 12:55 AM, David Hart via swift-evolution
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Hello evolution folks,
>>
>> After the positive feedback on the idea of improving capturing semantics of
>> local functions, Alex Lynch and I worked on a proposal. Please let us know
>> if you have any feedback:
>>
>> https://github.com/hartbit/swift-evolution/blob/improving-capturing-semantics-of-local-functions/proposals/XXXX-improve-capture-semantics-of-local-functions.md
>
> So, quoting the proposal:
>
>> First of all, this proposal suggests extending the requirement of the self.
>> prefix to local functions, but only if the local function is used as or used
>> inside an escaping closure.
>
> I don't love that the use of a function many lines away can cause errors in
> that closure. There's a "spooky action-at-a-distance" quality to this
> behavior that I don't like.
>
> The best idea I have is to require local functions to be annotated with
> `@escaping` if they're to be used in an escaping closure:
>
> func foo() {
> // `local1` is nonescaping since it isn't marked with the @escaping
> attribute.
> func local1() {
> bar()
> }
> local1() // OK, direct call
> { local1() }() // OK, closure is nonescaping
> DispatchQueue.main.async(execute: local1) // error: passing
> non-escaping function 'local2' to function expecting an @escaping closure
> DispatchQueue.main.async { local1() } // error: closure use
> of non-escaping function 'local2' may allow it to escape
>
> @escaping func local2() {
> bar() // error: call to method 'bar' in escaping
> local function requires explicit 'self.' to make capture semantics explicit
> }
>
> @escaping func local3() {
> self. bar() // OK, explicit `self`
> }
> DispatchQueue.main.async(execute: local3) // OK, escaping function
> DispatchQueue.main.async { local3() } // OK, escaping closure
> }
>
> func bar() {
> print("bar")
> }
>
> But this would be quite source-breaking. (Maybe it could be introduced as a
> warning first?)
I like the idea of requiring @escaping to be explicit on local funcs, but I'm
worried that it might be too onerous; after all, we infer @escapingness on
closures quite successfully. At the same time, I agree that applying semantic
rules based on how the func is used, potentially much later in the function, is
really spooky. I don't have a great alternative right now.
Random note: we currently infer non-escapingness for local funcs that capture
``inout``s, since those cannot be allowed to escape. In fact, this is the only
way to make a local function non-escaping at all.
John.
>
>> Secondly, this proposal suggests allowing the same capture list syntax from
>> closures in local functions. Capture lists would still be invalid in
>> top-level and member functions.
>
>
> I think this is a good idea, but I don't like bringing the already weird use
> of `in` to actual functions.
>
> By analogy with the current closure syntax, the capture list ought to go
> somewhere before the parameter list, in one of these slots:
>
> 1. func fn<T>[foo, bar](param: T) throws -> T where T: Equatable { … }
> 2. func fn[foo, bar]<T>(param: T) throws -> T where T: Equatable { … }
> 3. func [foo, bar] fn<T>(param: T) throws -> T where T: Equatable { … }
> 4. [foo, bar] func fn<T>(param: T) throws -> T where T: Equatable { … }
>
> Of these options, I actually think #4 reads best; 1 and 2 are very cluttered,
> and 3 just seems weird. But it seems like the one that would be easiest to
> misparse.
>
> --
> Brent Royal-Gordon
> Architechies
>
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