Instead of using Self
or A
in each of the initialisers, you can simply override each subclass' initialiser to use its own type as operation
.
This works because A
's initialiser states that operation
should be a type that conforms to A
, and when you override it you have the liberty to use a subclass of A
as operation
instead. However, if you change operation
to an unrelated type such as String
or Int
, the compiler will not override the existing initialiser.
Firstly, define A
with its init
:
class A {
init(finishBlock: ((_ operation: A) -> Void)?) {...}
}
Now to create a subclass, you must override init
using the subclass' type as operation
instead. In your call to super.init
, force upcast operation
($0
) to your subclass' type, and call finishBlock
with this casted operation
.
class B: A {
override init(finishBlock: ((_ operation: B) -> Void)?) {
// Perform custom initialisation...
super.init { finishBlock?($0 as! B) }
}
func fooOnlyInB() {
print("foo")
}
}
B
's initialiser now passes B
as operation
, which means that you don't need to cast it yourself anymore! This is thanks to the fact that you can override an init
with a more specific type, in this case B
.
let b = B { operation in
operation.fooOnlyInB() // prints "foo"
}
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