183

Unlike Objective-C, Swift has no preprocessor, so is there still a way to manually deprecate members of a class?

I am looking for something similar to this:

-(id)method __deprecated;
Brian Tompsett - 汤莱恩
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Atomix
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4 Answers4

297

You can use the Available tag, for example :

@available(*, deprecated)
func myFunc() { 
    // ...
}

Where * is the platform (iOS, iOSApplicationExtension, macOS, watchOS, tvOS, * for all, etc.).

You can also specify the version of the platform from which it was introduced, deprecated, obsoleted, renamed, and a message :

@available(iOS, deprecated:6.0)
func myFunc() { 
    // calling this function is deprecated on iOS6+
}

Or

@available(iOS, deprecated: 6.0, obsoleted: 7.0, message: "Because !")
func myFunc() {
    // deprecated from iOS6, and obsoleted after iOS7, the message "Because !" is displayed in XCode warnings
}

If your project targets multiple platforms, you can use several tags like so :

@available(tvOS, deprecated:9.0.1)
@available(iOS, deprecated:9.1)
@available(macOS, unavailable, message: "Unavailable on macOS")
func myFunc() {
    // ...
}

More details in the Swift documentation.

Axel Guilmin
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77

Starting Swift 3 and Swift 4, the version number is optional. You can now simply type:

@available(*, deprecated)
func foo() {
    // ...
}

Or if you want a message go along with it:

@available(*, deprecated, message: "no longer available ...")
func foo() {
    // ...
}
Yuchen
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    For Swift 2.3, version number is optional, too. – DawnSong Oct 12 '16 at 11:33
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    For Swift 2.3, the syntax seems to be `@available(*, deprecated, message = "no longer available ...")` when including a message. – Daniel Zhang Nov 23 '16 at 06:35
  • @Daniel, that's weird that Apple changes part of it and not the rest and calling it 2.3. Sign, I will update the answer again, thanks for the note! – Yuchen Nov 23 '16 at 14:54
6

You can use this to auto-fix you entrys with your new func

@available(*, deprecated, renamed: "myNewFunc")
func myOldFunc() {
   // ...
}

func myNewFunc() {
   // ...
}

Instead of * you can use swift , for the swift Version number.

Deprecated functions generate warnings but can still be called. (Warning)

Obsolete functions stop it from being called entirely. (Error)

@available(swift, deprecated: 4.0, obsoleted: 4.2, message: "This will be removed in v4.2, please migrate to ...")

or use other Options like iOS, macOS, watchOS, tvOS ...

Skyborg
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3

iOS deprecate

@available(iOS, deprecated:7.0, obsoleted: <ObsoletedVersion>, renamed: "myFuncNew", message: "Please use new method - myFuncNew()")
func myFuncOld() {
    //logic
}

If deployment target[About] == 9.0 and

  • <ObsoletedVersion> == 10.0 - warning

    enter image description here

  • <ObsoletedVersion> == 8.0 - compile error

    enter image description here

yoAlex5
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  • In case of "obsolete" option, cannot use it. According to this, the option is not implemented. https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-8168 – mkjwa Feb 09 '20 at 03:41