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Start your free trialMohammad Usman
1,856 Pointsinit in Swift
enum Coin: Int { case Penny = 1, Nickel = 5, Dime = 10, Quarter = 25 init() { // self Quarter self.Quarter }
func isGreater(currentValue: Coin, newValue: Coin) -> Bool {
return currentValue.rawValue > newValue.rawValue
}
}
enum Coin: Int {
case Penny = 1, Nickel = 5, Dime = 10, Quarter = 25
init() {
Quarter = 25
}
func isGreater(currentValue: Coin, newValue: Coin) -> Bool {
return currentValue.rawValue > newValue.rawValue
}
}
1 Answer
Holger Liesegang
50,595 PointsHi @Mohammad Usman!
You initialize the value like this: self = .Quarter
because you access enum values using the dot notation Coin.Quarter
but since the compiler knows that you're referring to the Coin enum you can omit the Coin part.
enum Coin: Int {
case Penny = 1, Nickel = 5, Dime = 10, Quarter = 25
init() {
self = .Quarter
}
func isGreater(currentValue: Coin, newValue: Coin) -> Bool {
return currentValue.rawValue > newValue.rawValue
}
}