As described in the Xcode 8 beta 6 release notes,
Swift-defined error types can provide localized error descriptions by adopting the new LocalizedError protocol.
In your case:
public enum MyError: Error {
case customError
}
extension MyError: LocalizedError {
public var errorDescription: String? {
switch self {
case .customError:
return NSLocalizedString("A user-friendly description of the error.", comment: "My error")
}
}
}
let error: Error = MyError.customError
print(error.localizedDescription) // A user-friendly description of the error.
You can provide even more information if the error is converted
to NSError
(which is always possible):
extension MyError : LocalizedError {
public var errorDescription: String? {
switch self {
case .customError:
return NSLocalizedString("I failed.", comment: "")
}
}
public var failureReason: String? {
switch self {
case .customError:
return NSLocalizedString("I don't know why.", comment: "")
}
}
public var recoverySuggestion: String? {
switch self {
case .customError:
return NSLocalizedString("Switch it off and on again.", comment: "")
}
}
}
let error = MyError.customError as NSError
print(error.localizedDescription) // I failed.
print(error.localizedFailureReason) // Optional("I don't know why.")
print(error.localizedRecoverySuggestion) // Optional("Switch it off and on again.")
By adopting the CustomNSError
protocol the error can provide
a userInfo
dictionary (and also a domain
and code
). Example:
extension MyError: CustomNSError {
public static var errorDomain: String {
return "myDomain"
}
public var errorCode: Int {
switch self {
case .customError:
return 999
}
}
public var errorUserInfo: [String : Any] {
switch self {
case .customError:
return [ "line": 13]
}
}
}
let error = MyError.customError as NSError
if let line = error.userInfo["line"] as? Int {
print("Error in line", line) // Error in line 13
}
print(error.code) // 999
print(error.domain) // myDomain
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