How do you use enumerated in a list of structs in ForEach Swiftui?
Here is fixed part
ForEach(Array(someData.buttonObjects.enumerated()), id: \.element.id) { ind, object in
HStack{
Text("\(ind)")
Text(object.name)
}
}
How do you use .enumerated() with ForEach in SwiftUI?
TL;DR
Warning: If you get in the habit of using enumerated()
with ForEach
, you may one day end up with EXC_BAD_INSTRUCTION
or Fatal error: Index out of bounds
exceptions. This is because not all collections have 0-based indexes.
A better default is to use zip
instead:
ForEach(Array(zip(items.indices, items)), id: \.0) { index, item in
// index and item are both safe to use here
}
The folks over at Point-Free mentioned that it's not safe to rely on enumerated()
with ForEach
in production since not all collections are zero-index based:
This is technically not the most correct way to do this. It would be more correct, and more verbose, to zip the
todos
array with its indices collection. In this case we are safe because we are dealing with a simple 0-based index array, but if we were doing this in production we should probablyzip
-based approach.
Apple's documentation for the enumerated function mentions this as well:
/// Returns a sequence of pairs (*n*, *x*), where *n* represents a
/// consecutive integer starting at zero and *x* represents an element of
/// the sequence.
///
/// This example enumerates the characters of the string "Swift" and prints
/// each character along with its place in the string.
///
/// for (n, c) in "Swift".enumerated() {
/// print("\(n): '\(c)'")
/// }
/// // Prints "0: 'S'"
/// // Prints "1: 'w'"
/// // Prints "2: 'i'"
/// // Prints "3: 'f'"
/// // Prints "4: 't'"
///
/// When you enumerate a collection, the integer part of each pair is a counter
/// for the enumeration, but is not necessarily the index of the paired value.
/// These counters can be used as indices only in instances of zero-based,
/// integer-indexed collections, such as `Array` and `ContiguousArray`. For
/// other collections the counters may be out of range or of the wrong type
/// to use as an index. To iterate over the elements of a collection with its
/// indices, use the `zip(_:_:)` function.
///
/// This example iterates over the indices and elements of a set, building a
/// list consisting of indices of names with five or fewer letters.
///
/// let names: Set = ["Sofia", "Camilla", "Martina", "Mateo", "Nicolás"]
/// var shorterIndices: [Set<String>.Index] = []
/// for (i, name) in zip(names.indices, names) {
/// if name.count <= 5 {
/// shorterIndices.append(i)
/// }
/// }
///
/// Now that the `shorterIndices` array holds the indices of the shorter
/// names in the `names` set, you can use those indices to access elements in
/// the set.
///
/// for i in shorterIndices {
/// print(names[i])
/// }
/// // Prints "Sofia"
/// // Prints "Mateo"
///
/// - Returns: A sequence of pairs enumerating the sequence.
///
/// - Complexity: O(1)
In your specific case enumerated()
is fine to use since you are using a 0-based index array, however due to the details above, relying on enumerated()
all the time can lead to non-obvious errors.
Take this snippet, for example:
ForEach(Array(items.enumerated()), id: \.offset) { offset, item in
Button(item, action: { store.didTapItem(at: offset) })
}
// ...
class Store {
var items: ArraySlice<String>
func didTapItem(at index: Int) {
print(items[index])
}
}
First notice that we dodged a bullet with Button(item...
since enumerated()
has guaranteed that item
can be accessed directly without causing an exception. However, if instead of item
we used items[offset]
, an exception could easily be raised.
Finally, the line print(items[index])
can easily lead to an exception since the index (really the offset) can be out of bounds.
Therefore, a safer approach is to always use the zip
method mentioned at the top of this post.
Another reason to prefer zip
is that if you tried using the same code with a different Collection (e.g. Set) you could get the following syntax error when indexing into the type (items[index]
):
Cannot convert value of type 'Int' to expected argument type 'Set.Index'
By using the zip
based approach, you can still index into the collection.
You could also create an extension on collection if you plan on using it often.
You can test this all out in a Playground:
import PlaygroundSupport
import SwiftUI
// MARK: - Array
let array = ["a", "b", "c"]
Array(array.enumerated()) // [(offset 0, element "a"), (offset 1, element "b"), (offset 2, element "c")]
Array(zip(array.indices, array)) // [(.0 0, .1 "a"), (.0 1, .1 "b"), (.0 2, .1 "c")]
let arrayView = Group {
ForEach(Array(array.enumerated()), id: \.offset) { offset, element in
PrintView("offset: \(offset), element: \(element)")
Text("value: \(array[offset])")
}
// offset: 0, element: a
// offset: 1, element: b
// offset: 2, element: c
ForEach(Array(zip(array.indices, array)), id: \.0) { index, element in
PrintView("index: \(index), element: \(element)")
Text("value: \(array[index])")
}
// index: 0, element: a
// index: 1, element: b
// index: 2, element: c
}
// MARK: - Array Slice
let arraySlice = array[1...2] // ["b", "c"]
Array(arraySlice.enumerated()) // [(offset 0, element "b"), (offset 1, element "c")]
Array(zip(arraySlice.indices, arraySlice)) // [(.0 1, .1 "b"), (.0 2, .1 "c")]
// arraySlice[0] // ❌ EXC_BAD_INSTRUCTION
arraySlice[1] // "b"
arraySlice[2] // "c"
let arraySliceView = Group {
ForEach(Array(arraySlice.enumerated()), id: \.offset) { offset, element in
PrintView("offset: \(offset), element: \(element)")
// Text("value: \(arraySlice[offset])") ❌ Fatal error: Index out of bounds
}
// offset: 0, element: b
// offset: 1, element: c
ForEach(Array(zip(arraySlice.indices, arraySlice)), id: \.0) { index, element in
PrintView("index: \(index), element: \(element)")
Text("value: \(arraySlice[index])")
}
// index: 1, element: b
// index: 2, element: c
}
// MARK: - Set
let set: Set = ["a", "b", "c"]
Array(set.enumerated()) // [(offset 0, element "b"), (offset 1, element "c"), (offset 2, element "a")]
Array(zip(set.indices, set)) // [({…}, .1 "a"), ({…}, .1 "b"), ({…}, .1 "c")]
let setView = Group {
ForEach(Array(set.enumerated()), id: \.offset) { offset, element in
PrintView("offset: \(offset), element: \(element)")
// Text("value: \(set[offset])") // ❌ Syntax error: Cannot convert value of type 'Int' to expected argument type 'Set<String>.Index'
}
// offset: 0, element: a
// offset: 1, element: b
// offset: 2, element: c
ForEach(Array(zip(set.indices, set)), id: \.0) { index, element in
PrintView("index: \(index), element: \(element)")
Text("value: \(set[index])")
}
// index: Index(_variant: Swift.Set<Swift.String>.Index._Variant.native(Swift._HashTable.Index(bucket: Swift._HashTable.Bucket(offset: 0), age: -481854246))), element: a
// index: Index(_variant: Swift.Set<Swift.String>.Index._Variant.native(Swift._HashTable.Index(bucket: Swift._HashTable.Bucket(offset: 2), age: -481854246))), element: b
// index: Index(_variant: Swift.Set<Swift.String>.Index._Variant.native(Swift._HashTable.Index(bucket: Swift._HashTable.Bucket(offset: 3), age: -481854246))), element: c
}
// MARK: -
struct PrintView: View {
init(_ string: String) {
print(string)
self.string = string
}
var string: String
var body: some View {
Text(string)
}
}
let allViews = Group {
arrayView
arraySliceView
setView
}
PlaygroundPage.current.setLiveView(allViews)
Updates:
- Deleted the part that mentioned you can use
\.1
since Peacemoon points out this could cause problems. Also I'm pretty sure if your items conform toIdentifiable
, there's no point in using zip in the first place, you should be able to just doForEach(identifiableItems)
.
Using enumerated with ForEach in SwiftUI
Let's assume we have an Array
of objects of type Item
:
struct Item {
let customID: Int
let value: String
}
let arrayNew = [
Item(customID: 1, value: "1"),
Item(customID: 23, value: "12"),
Item(customID: 2, value: "32")
]
Now, if we want to access both offset
and item
from the array, we need to use enumerated()
:
arrayNew.enumerated()
However, it returns an EnumeratedSequence
(and not an Array
):
@inlinable public func enumerated() -> EnumeratedSequence<Array<Element>>
If we take a look at the signature of ForEach
, we can see that it expects RandomAccessCollection
:
public struct ForEach<Data, ID, Content> where Data : RandomAccessCollection, ID : Hashable
The problem here is that EnumeratedSequence
doesn't conform to RandomAccessCollection
.
But Array
does - we just need to convert the result of enumerated()
back to an Array
:
Array(arrayNew.enumerated())
Now, we can use it directly in the ForEach
:
ForEach(Array(arrayNew.enumerated()), id: \.element.customID) { offset, item in
Text("\(offset) \(item.customID) \(item.value)")
}
SwiftUI build a list using enums
try this:
enum Whatever : String, CaseIterable, Identifiable {
var id : String { UUID().uuidString }
case one = "one"
case two = "two"
}
struct ContentView: View {
var body: some View {
VStack {
List (Whatever.allCases) { value in
Text(value.rawValue)
}
}
}
}
struct ContentView_Previews: PreviewProvider {
static var previews: some View {
ContentView()
}
}
Passing data from enum to sheet triggered inside ForEach loop
Since you were losing track of the current card, I fixed this by saving the card which is going to be shown. Now the text is displayed correctly.
Here is the fixed version:
struct ListView: View {
@State private var infoSheetIsPresented: Bool = false
@State private var showingCard: WelcomeCardViewContent = .personalData
var body: some View {
ForEach(WelcomeCardViewContent.allCases, id: \.self) { element in
HStack {
Text(element.text)
Button(action: {
self.showingCard = element
self.infoSheetIsPresented.toggle()
}) {
Image(systemName: "info.circle")
}
.sheet(isPresented: self.$infoSheetIsPresented) {
Text(self.showingCard.infoText)
}
}
}
}
}
SwiftUI Dynamically Create Enum or
You're making it much more complicated than necessary. You don't need an enum
, you can use any value, even your array values directly.
struct ContentView: View {
@AccessibilityFocusState var pickerAccessFocus: SalutationOptions?
@State private var salutation = ""
var salutationList: [SalutationOptions] = []
var body: some View {
List {
Section {
ForEach(salutationList, id: \.id) { salutation in
HStack {
Text(salutation.salutation)
} // End HStack
.contentShape(Rectangle())
.accessibilityFocused($pickerAccessFocus, equals: salutation)
} // End ForEach
} // End Section
} // End List
}
}
.enumerated() method not working on array
The enumerated()
returns sequence of tuples, which you can convert to array, like
HStack {
ForEach(Array(myArray.enumerated()), id: \.1) { index, name in
Circle()
ForEach - print both an item and numerical value
Try using enumerated
ForEach(Array(recipeDirections.enumerated()), id: \.offset){ (index,recipe) in
The index will be 0,1,2, according to array numbers.
Related Topics
How to Change/Modify The Displayed Title of an Nspopupbutton
Programmatically Select All Cells in Tableview So Next Time They Are Pressed They Call Diddeselect
Call Function on App Termination in Swift
Disable Bringing App Window to Front. After Closing Another Window
Pfuser That Created Object Cannot Delete Object Despite Acl Writing Access
Use Tableviewcontroller Inside Skscene
Closure (With Default Value) as Function Parameter
How to Stop Dispatchgroup or Operationqueue Waiting
Difference Between Orientation and Rotation in Scnnode
Type Alias Declaration with Templates in Swift
How to Center Nspopover When Using Swiftui
How Make Polygon Without Intersection in Swift
Swiching Between 2 Diferent Nsviewcontrollers with Data
Verifying The Purchase (Receipt) of Another Application (Mac App Store)
Swift Dictionary Initialization of Custom Type Gives: '>' Is Not a Postfix Unary Operator Error