Book Image

Swift Functional Programming - Second Edition

By : Dr. Fatih Nayebi
Book Image

Swift Functional Programming - Second Edition

By: Dr. Fatih Nayebi

Overview of this book

Swift is a multi-paradigm programming language enabling you to tackle different problems in various ways. Understanding each paradigm and knowing when and how to utilize and combine them can lead to a better code base. Functional programming (FP) is an important paradigm that empowers us with declarative development and makes applications more suitable for testing, as well as performant and elegant. This book aims to simplify the FP paradigms, making them easily understandable and usable, by showing you how to solve many of your day-to-day development problems using Swift FP. It starts with the basics of FP, and you will go through all the core concepts of Swift and the building blocks of FP. You will also go through important aspects, such as function composition and currying, custom operator definition, monads, functors, applicative functors,memoization, lenses, algebraic data types, type erasure, functional data structures, functional reactive programming (FRP), and protocol-oriented programming(POP). You will then learn to combine those techniques to develop a fully functional iOS application from scratch
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface

Error handling


Optionals are used to represent the existence/absence of a value. A result of an operation can be optional, so when that operation fails we will receive nil. The optional itself will not provide any information about how our operation failed and what the cause of the failure, and in most of cases it is useful to know the context and cause of the failure to be able to respond accordingly in our code.

Error handling is the process of responding to and recovering from error conditions in our applications. The Swift standard library provides first-class support for throwing, catching, propagating, and manipulating recoverable errors at runtime.

Let's go through an example to explore the error handling concept. Suppose that we need to read a file and return the content of that file. Using Optionals, we can develop it as follows:

func checkForPath(path: String) -> String? { 
    // check for the path 
    return "path" 
} 

func readFile(path: String) -> String? { 
    if let...