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Attached macro loses generated source file
I’m seeing what looks like a compiler / macro-expansion / build-pipeline issue. Environment: Xcode 26.4 RC (17E192, latest); I believe it is also reproducible on earlier versions. github source code I reduced this to a very small macOS/iOS app plus a local macro package. The app logic is trivial, but app exits immediately on launch with code 138 Important observations: If I inline everything into a single file, the problem disappears. I also see an error like this during investigation: The file path does not exist on the file system: /var/folders/.../swift-generated-sources/@__swiftmacro_18MacroFeedbackRepro20MountActivationState17PreservedRawValuefMm_.swift That makes me suspect this is not an application logic issue, but something in macro expansion / generated source handling / compiler pipeline.
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2k
Mar ’26
On iPad with Swift Playgrounds: How to open chapter as a playground?
Note On a Mac with Xcode installed, or on an iPad with Swift Playgrounds, you can open this chapter as a playground. Playgrounds allow you to edit the code listings and see the results immediately. (Note in page 3) (I would like to open the chapter or book: Swift Programming Language in Swift Playground on iPad) https://books.apple.com/ve/book/the-swift-programming-language-swift-5-7-beta/id1002622538?l=en-GB Best regards
2
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1.8k
Mar ’26
macOS main.swift and Main actor-isolated conformance cannot be used in nonisolated context
For a simple, resourceless cocoa apps I used to manually setup the application lifecycle (mimicking what's documented here: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/appkit/nsapplication), so my main.swift would look like: import Cocoa let delegate = SomeDelegate() _ = NSApplication.shared NSApp.delegate = delegate NSApp.run() This triggers a warning in Xcode 26.2: "Main actor-isolated conformance of SomeDelegate cannot be used in nonisolated context; this is an error in Swift 6 language mode". so what is the recommended way to refactor above so that it is Swift 6 compliant?
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918
Apr ’26
String Catalogs auto-generated symbols located in Swift Packages with default Main Actor isolation don't compile with Xcode 26.4
Hello, I've already reported this issue via Feedback Assistant a month ago (FB22340897) but it's still open and I'd like to know whether I can expect something to be changed regarding it. Here are the details: It seems that Xcode 26.4 started specifying nonisolated for the resourceBundleDescription in the generated stringSymbols files for Swift packages: from: private let resourceBundleDescription = LocalizedStringResource.BundleDescription.atURL(resourceBundle.bundleURL) to: private nonisolated let resourceBundleDescription = LocalizedStringResource.BundleDescription.atURL(resourceBundle.bundleURL) This causes a compilation error: Main actor-isolated default value in a nonisolated context when the Package.swift for the Swift Package in which the string catalog is located specifies: swiftSettings: [.defaultIsolation(MainActor.self)] Since all tools (String Catalogs, Swift Packages and default actor isolation to be Main Actor) are recommended by Apple, I believe it should be possible to use all these together like before Xcode 26.4.
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3w
Misleading error on ForEach
During refactoring of an app I made a typo which leads to a misleading error message in Xcode 26.4. I could reproduce it with a small sample code in Swift Playground. Is it a bug which should be reported? Details: I have an array containing two strings. Using a ForEach loop is fine: ForEach(appData.dataArray, id: \.self) { value in Text("\(value.subject)\t\(value.room)") } but with a typo in the Text line I got an error on the ForEach line: ForEach(appData.dataArray, id: \.self) { value in --> Cannot convert value of type '[MyArray]' to expected argument type 'Binding' Text("\(value.subject)\t\(value.subject.room)") } Complete sample code from Swift Playground (macOS 26): import SwiftUI class MyArray : Hashable, Equatable, Identifiable, ObservableObject, Codable { let id = UUID() @Published var subject: String @Published var room : String private enum CodingKeys : String, CodingKey { case subject case room } init(subject : String, room : String) { self.subject = subject self.room = room } func encode(to encoder: Encoder) throws { var container = encoder.container(keyedBy: CodingKeys.self) try container.encode(subject, forKey: .subject) try container.encode(room, forKey: .room) } required init(from decoder: Decoder) throws { let container = try decoder.container(keyedBy: CodingKeys.self) subject = try container.decode(String.self, forKey: .subject) room = try container.decode(String.self, forKey: .room) } static func == (v1: MyArray, v2: MyArray) -> Bool { let result = v1.id == v2.id return result } func hash(into hasher: inout Hasher) { hasher.combine(id) } } public class AppData : ObservableObject { @Published var dataArray : [MyArray] = [] init() { dataArray.append(MyArray(subject: "Foo", room: "Bar")) dataArray.append(MyArray(subject: "Foo", room: "Batz")) } } struct ContentView: View { @EnvironmentObject var appData : AppData var body: some View { ForEach(appData.dataArray, id: \.self) { value in Text("\(value.subject)\t\(value.subject.room)") // to fix the error replace value.subject.room with value.room } } } @main struct MyApp: App { var appData = AppData() var body: some Scene { WindowGroup { ContentView() .environmentObject(appData) } } }
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3w
A Repeating timer in Swift 6
I'm using that repeating timer for processing information repeatedly: actor RepeatingTimer { private var task: Task<Void, Never>? private var isPaused = false func start(duration: Double, onTick: @escaping () -> Void) { task?.cancel() // Cancel any existing timer isPaused = false task = Task { while !Task.isCancelled { // Check if paused if !isPaused { onTick() } // Sleep for the interval try? await Task.sleep(for: .seconds(duration)) } } } func pause() { isPaused = true } func resume() { isPaused = false } func stop() { task?.cancel() task = nil } }` Yet when I call it from another actor with: await timer.start(duration: interval, onTick:{ self.process() }) I get: Sending 'self'-isolated value of non-Sendable type '() -> ()' to actor-isolated instance method 'start(duration:onTick:)' risks causing races in between 'self'-isolated and actor-isolated uses Is there some more stable option for managing repeating timers, or how to solve this error?
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778
2w
Sending 'geoRegion' risks causing data races
I have this simple piece of code that of course correctly ran in Swift 5: func geoRegion()-> CLRegion?{ guard let location=referenceLocation else{ return nil } return CLCircularRegion(center:location.coordinate, radius:50000, identifier:"georeferencing") } func placemarksForAddress(_ address: String) async throws -> [CLPlacemark]?{ if let placemark=placemarkCache[address]{ if placemark.location!.distance(from: referenceLocation!)<100000{ return [placemark] } } do{ guard let geoRegion=self.geoRegion() else { return nil } let placemarks = try await georeferenceQueue.geocodeAddressString( address, in: geoRegion) if placemarks.count>=0{ self.placemarkCache[address]=MKPlacemark(placemark: placemarks[0]) return placemarks } } catch { let placemarks=try await self.placemarkForLocation(referenceLocation) return placemarks } return nil } That now presents error: Sending task-isolated 'geoRegion' to actor-isolated instance method 'geocodeAddressString(_:in:)' risks causing data races between actor-isolated and task-isolated uses
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1.1k
2w
Passing closure as a 'sending' parameter risks causing data races between code in the current task and concurrent execution
I'm keeping most information in an actor and I would like to save also a closure in it that I get from func application( _ application: UIApplication, handleEventsForBackgroundURLSession identifier: String, completionHandler: @escaping () -> Void) Task.init{ await GeoreferenceQueue.shared.setBackgroundCompletionHandler(completionHandler) } } where GeoreferenceQueue is and actor, while the caller is a class. yet I receive error: Passing closure as a 'sending' parameter risks causing data races between code in the current task and concurrent execution of the closure and Sending task-isolated 'completionHandler' to actor-isolated instance method 'setBackgroundCompletionHandler' risks causing data races between actor-isolated and task-isolated uses
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1.7k
2w
Attached macro loses generated source file
I’m seeing what looks like a compiler / macro-expansion / build-pipeline issue. Environment: Xcode 26.4 RC (17E192, latest); I believe it is also reproducible on earlier versions. github source code I reduced this to a very small macOS/iOS app plus a local macro package. The app logic is trivial, but app exits immediately on launch with code 138 Important observations: If I inline everything into a single file, the problem disappears. I also see an error like this during investigation: The file path does not exist on the file system: /var/folders/.../swift-generated-sources/@__swiftmacro_18MacroFeedbackRepro20MountActivationState17PreservedRawValuefMm_.swift That makes me suspect this is not an application logic issue, but something in macro expansion / generated source handling / compiler pipeline.
Replies
2
Boosts
0
Views
2k
Activity
Mar ’26
On iPad with Swift Playgrounds: How to open chapter as a playground?
Note On a Mac with Xcode installed, or on an iPad with Swift Playgrounds, you can open this chapter as a playground. Playgrounds allow you to edit the code listings and see the results immediately. (Note in page 3) (I would like to open the chapter or book: Swift Programming Language in Swift Playground on iPad) https://books.apple.com/ve/book/the-swift-programming-language-swift-5-7-beta/id1002622538?l=en-GB Best regards
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2
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0
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1.8k
Activity
Mar ’26
How works Experiment (Documentation) in Swift Playground?
Experiment Create a constant with an explicit type of Float and a value of 4. https://docs.swift.org/swift-book/documentation/the-swift-programming-language/guidedtour
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3
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0
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2.3k
Activity
Mar ’26
macOS main.swift and Main actor-isolated conformance cannot be used in nonisolated context
For a simple, resourceless cocoa apps I used to manually setup the application lifecycle (mimicking what's documented here: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/appkit/nsapplication), so my main.swift would look like: import Cocoa let delegate = SomeDelegate() _ = NSApplication.shared NSApp.delegate = delegate NSApp.run() This triggers a warning in Xcode 26.2: "Main actor-isolated conformance of SomeDelegate cannot be used in nonisolated context; this is an error in Swift 6 language mode". so what is the recommended way to refactor above so that it is Swift 6 compliant?
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1
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0
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918
Activity
Apr ’26
Add a DancingCreatures view
I'm almost having a heart attack with this "a DancingCreatures view" issue. I must be really dumb I've tried everything and the question just won't move forward. Someone, for the love of God, explain to me what it would be.
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0
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0
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944
Activity
3w
String Catalogs auto-generated symbols located in Swift Packages with default Main Actor isolation don't compile with Xcode 26.4
Hello, I've already reported this issue via Feedback Assistant a month ago (FB22340897) but it's still open and I'd like to know whether I can expect something to be changed regarding it. Here are the details: It seems that Xcode 26.4 started specifying nonisolated for the resourceBundleDescription in the generated stringSymbols files for Swift packages: from: private let resourceBundleDescription = LocalizedStringResource.BundleDescription.atURL(resourceBundle.bundleURL) to: private nonisolated let resourceBundleDescription = LocalizedStringResource.BundleDescription.atURL(resourceBundle.bundleURL) This causes a compilation error: Main actor-isolated default value in a nonisolated context when the Package.swift for the Swift Package in which the string catalog is located specifies: swiftSettings: [.defaultIsolation(MainActor.self)] Since all tools (String Catalogs, Swift Packages and default actor isolation to be Main Actor) are recommended by Apple, I believe it should be possible to use all these together like before Xcode 26.4.
Replies
1
Boosts
0
Views
1k
Activity
3w
Misleading error on ForEach
During refactoring of an app I made a typo which leads to a misleading error message in Xcode 26.4. I could reproduce it with a small sample code in Swift Playground. Is it a bug which should be reported? Details: I have an array containing two strings. Using a ForEach loop is fine: ForEach(appData.dataArray, id: \.self) { value in Text("\(value.subject)\t\(value.room)") } but with a typo in the Text line I got an error on the ForEach line: ForEach(appData.dataArray, id: \.self) { value in --> Cannot convert value of type '[MyArray]' to expected argument type 'Binding' Text("\(value.subject)\t\(value.subject.room)") } Complete sample code from Swift Playground (macOS 26): import SwiftUI class MyArray : Hashable, Equatable, Identifiable, ObservableObject, Codable { let id = UUID() @Published var subject: String @Published var room : String private enum CodingKeys : String, CodingKey { case subject case room } init(subject : String, room : String) { self.subject = subject self.room = room } func encode(to encoder: Encoder) throws { var container = encoder.container(keyedBy: CodingKeys.self) try container.encode(subject, forKey: .subject) try container.encode(room, forKey: .room) } required init(from decoder: Decoder) throws { let container = try decoder.container(keyedBy: CodingKeys.self) subject = try container.decode(String.self, forKey: .subject) room = try container.decode(String.self, forKey: .room) } static func == (v1: MyArray, v2: MyArray) -> Bool { let result = v1.id == v2.id return result } func hash(into hasher: inout Hasher) { hasher.combine(id) } } public class AppData : ObservableObject { @Published var dataArray : [MyArray] = [] init() { dataArray.append(MyArray(subject: "Foo", room: "Bar")) dataArray.append(MyArray(subject: "Foo", room: "Batz")) } } struct ContentView: View { @EnvironmentObject var appData : AppData var body: some View { ForEach(appData.dataArray, id: \.self) { value in Text("\(value.subject)\t\(value.subject.room)") // to fix the error replace value.subject.room with value.room } } } @main struct MyApp: App { var appData = AppData() var body: some Scene { WindowGroup { ContentView() .environmentObject(appData) } } }
Replies
2
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0
Views
1.4k
Activity
3w
A Repeating timer in Swift 6
I'm using that repeating timer for processing information repeatedly: actor RepeatingTimer { private var task: Task<Void, Never>? private var isPaused = false func start(duration: Double, onTick: @escaping () -> Void) { task?.cancel() // Cancel any existing timer isPaused = false task = Task { while !Task.isCancelled { // Check if paused if !isPaused { onTick() } // Sleep for the interval try? await Task.sleep(for: .seconds(duration)) } } } func pause() { isPaused = true } func resume() { isPaused = false } func stop() { task?.cancel() task = nil } }` Yet when I call it from another actor with: await timer.start(duration: interval, onTick:{ self.process() }) I get: Sending 'self'-isolated value of non-Sendable type '() -> ()' to actor-isolated instance method 'start(duration:onTick:)' risks causing races in between 'self'-isolated and actor-isolated uses Is there some more stable option for managing repeating timers, or how to solve this error?
Replies
4
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0
Views
778
Activity
2w
Sending 'geoRegion' risks causing data races
I have this simple piece of code that of course correctly ran in Swift 5: func geoRegion()-> CLRegion?{ guard let location=referenceLocation else{ return nil } return CLCircularRegion(center:location.coordinate, radius:50000, identifier:"georeferencing") } func placemarksForAddress(_ address: String) async throws -> [CLPlacemark]?{ if let placemark=placemarkCache[address]{ if placemark.location!.distance(from: referenceLocation!)<100000{ return [placemark] } } do{ guard let geoRegion=self.geoRegion() else { return nil } let placemarks = try await georeferenceQueue.geocodeAddressString( address, in: geoRegion) if placemarks.count>=0{ self.placemarkCache[address]=MKPlacemark(placemark: placemarks[0]) return placemarks } } catch { let placemarks=try await self.placemarkForLocation(referenceLocation) return placemarks } return nil } That now presents error: Sending task-isolated 'geoRegion' to actor-isolated instance method 'geocodeAddressString(_:in:)' risks causing data races between actor-isolated and task-isolated uses
Replies
4
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0
Views
1.1k
Activity
2w
Passing closure as a 'sending' parameter risks causing data races between code in the current task and concurrent execution
I'm keeping most information in an actor and I would like to save also a closure in it that I get from func application( _ application: UIApplication, handleEventsForBackgroundURLSession identifier: String, completionHandler: @escaping () -> Void) Task.init{ await GeoreferenceQueue.shared.setBackgroundCompletionHandler(completionHandler) } } where GeoreferenceQueue is and actor, while the caller is a class. yet I receive error: Passing closure as a 'sending' parameter risks causing data races between code in the current task and concurrent execution of the closure and Sending task-isolated 'completionHandler' to actor-isolated instance method 'setBackgroundCompletionHandler' risks causing data races between actor-isolated and task-isolated uses
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9
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1.7k
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2w