We used to declare property
to pass data between classes as following:
.h file (interface file)
@property (nonatomic) double topSpeed;
.m file (implementation file)
@synthesize topSpeed;
Now there is no interface
class, how to pass data between .swift
classes ?
Swift provides no differentiation between properties and instance variables (i.e, the underlying store for a property). To define a property, you simply declare a variable in the context of a class.
A swift class is simply a ClassName.swift file.
You declare a class and properties as
class SomeClass {
var topSpeed: Double
var aStrProperty: String
var anIntProperty: Int
//Initializers and other functions
}
You access property values via dot notation. As of Xcode6 beta 4, there also are access modifiers (public
, internal
and private
) in Swift. By default every property is internal
. See here for more information.
For more information, refer to the Swift Programming Guide:
Stored Properties and Instance Variables
If you have experience with Objective-C, you may know that it provides
two ways to store values and references as part of a class instance.
In addition to properties, you can use instance variables as a backing
store for the values stored in a property.
Swift unifies these concepts into a single property declaration. A
Swift property does not have a corresponding instance variable, and
the backing store for a property is not accessed directly. This
approach avoids confusion about how the value is accessed in different
contexts and simplifies the property’s declaration into a single,
definitive statement. All information about the property—including its
name, type, and memory management characteristics—is defined in a
single location as part of the type’s definition.
Using Properties.
From the Swift Programming Guide:
Stored Properties and Instance Variables
If you have experience with Objective-C, you may know that it provides
two ways to store values and references as part of a class instance.
In addition to properties, you can use instance variables as a backing
store for the values stored in a property.
Swift unifies these concepts into a single property declaration. A
Swift property does not have a corresponding instance variable, and
the backing store for a property is not accessed directly. This
approach avoids confusion about how the value is accessed in different
contexts and simplifies the property’s declaration into a single,
definitive statement. All information about the property—including its
name, type, and memory management characteristics—is defined in a
single location as part of the type’s definition.
Properties in Objective-C correspond to properties in Swift. There are two ways to implement properties in Objective-C and Swift:
- Synthesized/auto-synthesized properties in Objective C -- these are called "stored properties" in Swift. You simply declare it with
var topSpeed : Double
or let topSpeed : Double = 4.2
in a class declaration, exactly as you would declare a local variable in a function body. You don't get to specify the name of the backing instance variable because, well, there are currently no instance variables in Swift. You must always use the property instead of its backing instance variable.
- Manually implemented properties in Objective-C -- these are called "computed properties" in Swift. You declare them in the class declaration like
var topSpeed : Double { get { getter code here } set { setter code here } }
(for readwrite
properties), or var topSpeed : Double { getter code here }
(for readonly
properties).
It sounds like at least part of your question relates to communicating a given class's interface to other classes. Like Java (and unlike C, C++, and Objective-C), Swift doesn't separate the interface from the implementation. You don't import
a header file if you want to use symbols defined somewhere else. Instead, you import
a module, like:
import Foundation
import MyClass
To access properties in another class, import that class.
Stored Properties and Instance Variables
If you have experience with Objective-C, you may know that it provides two ways to store values and references as part of a class instance. In addition to properties, you can use instance variables as a backing store for the values stored in a property.
Swift unifies these concepts into a single property declaration. A Swift property does not have a corresponding instance variable, and the backing store for a property is not accessed directly. This approach avoids confusion about how the value is accessed in different contexts and simplifies the property’s declaration into a single, definitive statement. All information about the property—including its name, type, and memory management characteristics—is defined in a single location as part of the type’s definition.
From the Swift Programming Book:
struct FixedLengthRange {
var firstValue: Int
let length: Int
}
var rangeOfThreeItems = FixedLengthRange(firstValue: 0, length: 3)
I say : typealias
is equivalent even more in swift for @synthesize
just look at this link : https://docs.swift.org/swift-book/ReferenceManual/Declarations.html