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swiftxcode10swift4.1.5

Cannot invoke initializer for type 'Range<String.Index>' with an argument list of type '(Range<String.Index>)'


After updating to Xcode 10 beta, which apparently comes with Swift 4.1.50, I'm seeing the following error which I'm not sure how to fix:

Cannot invoke initializer for type 'Range< String.Index>' with an argument list of type '(Range< String.Index>)'

in the following function at Range<Index>(start..<self.endIndex) (line 3):

func index(of aString: String, startingFrom position: Int? = 0) -> String.Index? {
    let start: String.Index = self.index(self.startIndex, offsetBy: position!)
    let range: Range<Index> = Range<Index>(start..<self.endIndex)
    return self.range(of: aString, options: .literal, range: range, locale: nil)?.lowerBound
}

Any idea how to fix the initializer?


Solution

  • Some background:

    In Swift 3, additional range types were introduced, making a total of four (see for example Ole Begemann: Ranges in Swift 3):

    Range, ClosedRange, CountableRange, CountableClosedRange
    

    With the implementation of SE-0143 Conditional conformances in Swift 4.2, the “countable” variants are not separate types anymore, but (constrained) type aliases, for example

     public typealias CountableRange<Bound: Strideable> = Range<Bound>
          where Bound.Stride : SignedInteger
    

    and, as a consequence, various conversions between the different range types have been removed, such as the

    init(_ other: Range<Range.Bound>)
    

    initializer of struct Range. All theses changes are part of the [stdlib][WIP] Eliminate (Closed)CountableRange using conditional conformance (#13342) commit.

    So that is the reason why

    let range: Range<Index> = Range<Index>(start..<self.endIndex)
    

    does not compile anymore.

    How to fix

    As you already figured out, this can be simply fixed as

    let range: Range<Index> = start..<self.endIndex
    

    or just

    let range = start..<self.endIndex
    

    without the type annotation.

    Another option is to use a one sided range (introduced in Swift 4 with SE-0172 One-sided Ranges):

    extension String {
        func index(of aString: String, startingFrom position: Int = 0) -> String.Index? {
            let start = index(startIndex, offsetBy: position)
            return self[start...].range(of: aString, options: .literal)?.lowerBound
        }
    }
    

    This works because the substring self[start...] shares its indices with the originating string self.