The closures in Swift are explained with examples

Gurjit Singh
Mac O’Clock
Published in
3 min readApr 13, 2021

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Photo by James Harrison on Unsplash

Closures are a difficult topic to grasp in Swift, but they are simple to grasp if well described. Closures are functional blocks that can be used or passed around in code.

Closures are an old term that is identical to C and Objective-C blocks. Closures are similar to functions, but they are more flexible and have a more streamlined appearance. Closures are nested functions, and they can capture value, as we’ll see later in this article. Closures have the following significant characteristics:

  • It can be assign to variables or constants
  • It can be added to arrays, dictionaries or sets, among other things.
  • Closures can return from other functions or closures
  • Receive as function and closure parameters

Syntax

The following is a very clear and clean syntax for closures:

{(parameters) -> return type 
in
statements
}

Assign closures to variables or constants

let a = {(b:Int) -> Int
in
return b * 5
}

Tuples can be used as parameters in closures, and they can’t have a default value. The closure accepts an integer parameter and returns an integer that has been multiplied by 5.

Closures in an array or other collection types

let closures = [
{(a: Int) -> Int in return a * 3}
]

Let’s start with a simple array with only one closure that takes an integer as a parameter and returns an integer multiplied by three.

Inferring Type

Proceed to closure with a number of closures that all take an integer as a parameter and return an integer. We don’t need to rewrite it because Swift can infer the types of the parameters and values it returns.

let closures = [
{(x:Int) -> Int in return x * 7},
{x in return x - 2},
{$0 * 4}
]

The first closure in the preceding example has one integer parameter and returns an integer value. Since Swift infers type, we don’t need to write the type of parameters and return values in the second closure. Finally, we have closure argument names in shorthand.

Variable capture

A closure can catch constants and variables specified in the body, as well as change their value. Since functions and closures are the same thing, nested functions are just another type of closure.

func counterMaker(number: Int) -> Int {
var total = 0
//function within function
func addNumber() -> Int {
total += number
return total
}
return addNumber
}

There is a function called counterMaker in the example above that takes a number of type integer as a parameter and returns an integer value. It has an inner function called addNumber that captures two values: total and number, and counterMaker returns addNumber as a closure after capturing the values. Every time it calls, it adds a number to the total.

Conclusion

Since functions and closures are the same thing, use what syntax makes the most sense at the moment. It is entirely up to you to decide which one you want at any given time.

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Thanks!

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Gurjit Singh
Mac O’Clock

I’m Computer Science graduate and an iOS Engineer who writes about Swift and iOS development. Follow me on twitter @gurjitpt and for more articles www.gurjit.co