> On May 17, 2016, at 7:48 AM, Neil Faiman via swift-users
> wrote:
>
> “You can provide a default value for a stored property as part of its
> definition, as described in Default Property Values. You can also set and
> modify the initial value for a stored property during initialization. Thi
> On May 17, 2016, at 7:03 AM, Jeremy Pereira
> wrote:
>
>
>> On 16 May 2016, at 22:37, Neil Faiman via swift-users
>> wrote:
>>
>> Using the default Swift with Xcode 7.3.1.
>>
>> It appears that you cannot use the implicit memberwise initializer with a
>> struct that has “let” properties
Sent from my iPad
> On May 17, 2016, at 11:42 AM, Jeremy Pereira via swift-users
> wrote:
>
>
>> On 17 May 2016, at 15:48, Neil Faiman wrote:
>>
>> On May 17, 2016, at 7:03 AM, Jeremy Pereira
>> wrote:
>>
>>>
On 16 May 2016, at 22:37, Neil Faiman via swift-users
wrote:
> On 17 May 2016, at 15:48, Neil Faiman wrote:
>
> On May 17, 2016, at 7:03 AM, Jeremy Pereira
> wrote:
>
>>
>>> On 16 May 2016, at 22:37, Neil Faiman via swift-users
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Using the default Swift with Xcode 7.3.1.
>>>
>>> It appears that you cannot use the implicit memberwi
> On 16 May 2016, at 22:37, Neil Faiman via swift-users
> wrote:
>
> Using the default Swift with Xcode 7.3.1.
>
> It appears that you cannot use the implicit memberwise initializer with a
> struct that has “let” properties with default values.
>
>
It’s not a default value, it is *the* val
Using the default Swift with Xcode 7.3.1.
It appears that you cannot use the implicit memberwise initializer with a
struct that has “let” properties with default values.
This works perfectly:
struct CF {
let prop: Int
}
let cf = CF(prop: 1)
But give the property a default v