Like this:
override var supportedInterfaceOrientations : UIInterfaceOrientationMask {
...and the rest as you have it.
The general pattern
A lot of Cocoa methods are properties now, so you implement them as override computed variables. So the pattern for moving from seed 3 (or earlier) to seed 4 is:
Change func
to var
Delete ()
Change ->
to :
This works because a computed variable has a getter function, so the function you were implementing before simply turns into the getter function. And these are read-only properties, so you won't need a setter.
Similarly affected methods are preferredStatusBarStyle
, prefersStatusBarHidden
, shouldAutorotate
, preferredInterfaceOrientationForPresentation
, and many others. Look for UIKIT_DEFINE_AS_PROPERTIES
in the Objective-C header.
Implications
In the longer term, there are other changes you can make. For example, you can add a setter (dividing your implementation into get
and set
functions), and thus you can turn your implementation into a facade for a stored property. For example:
private var _orientations = UIInterfaceOrientationMask.portrait
override var supportedInterfaceOrientations : UIInterfaceOrientationMask {
get { return self._orientations }
set { self._orientations = newValue }
}
So now your code has a way to set this value. If you were returning different values at different times, this could make things a lot cleaner.
Further technical notes
Interestingly, this change has no direct effect on existing Objective-C code, because in Objective-C, the new property declaration, @property(nonatomic, readonly) UIInterfaceOrientationMask supportedInterfaceOrientations;
, is satisfied by the same method as before:
- (UIInterfaceOrientationMask)supportedInterfaceOrientations {
return UIInterfaceOrientationMaskPortrait;
}
The reason is that in Objective-C, a @property(readonly)
is merely a promise that a corresponding getter method exists, and that's exactly what this method is. But in Swift, the way to write an Objective-C property's getter method is through a property, that is, through an instance variable. So only Swift code is affected by the change: you have to rewrite your methods as properties.