- Swift 4 Programming Cookbook
- Keith Moon
- 191字
- 2025-04-04 18:15:56
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Class objects are reference types that refer to the way they are stored and referenced internally. To see how these reference type semantics work, consider the following code:
class MovieReview {
let movieTitle: String
var starRating: Int // Rating out of 5
init(movieTitle: String, starRating: Int) {
self.movieTitle = movieTitle
self.starRating = starRating
}
}
// Write a review
let shawshankReviewOnYourWebsite = MovieReview(movieTitle: "Shawshank Redemption", starRating: 3)
// Post it to social media
let reviewLinkOnTwitter = shawshankReviewOnYourWebsite
let reviewLinkOnFacebook = shawshankReviewOnYourWebsite
print(reviewLinkOnTwitter.starRating) // 3
print(reviewLinkOnFacebook.starRating) // 3
// Reconsider my review
shawshankReviewOnYourWebsite.starRating = 5
// The change visible from anywhere with a reference to the object
print(reviewLinkOnTwitter.starRating) // 5
print(reviewLinkOnFacebook.starRating) // 5
We created a review object and assigned that review to two separate constants. As an object is a reference type, it is a reference to the object that is stored in the constant, rather than a new copy of the object. Therefore, when we reconsider our review and rightly give The Shawshank Redemption five stars, we are changing the underlying object, and all references that access that underlying object will see that the starRating property has changed.