I've been playing around with Swift, and just came across an issue. I have the following Dictionary in:
var locations:Dictionary<String,CLLocationCoordinate2D> = ["current":CLLocationCoordinate2D(latitude: lat, longitude: lng) ];
println("current locaition is \(locations["current"])")
but the compiler is complaining about double quotes around current
which represent the a key in my dictionary.
I tried escaping it with \
but it wasn't the right way.
Appreciate any help.
Xcode 7.1+
Since Xcode 7.1 beta 2, we can now use quotations within string literals. From the release notes:
Expressions interpolated in strings may now contain string literals. For example, "My name is (attributes["name"]!)" is now a valid expression. (14050788)
Xcode <7.1
I don't think you can do it that way.
From the docs
The expressions you write inside parentheses within an interpolated string cannot contain an unescaped double quote (") or backslash (\), and cannot contain a carriage return or line feed.
You'd have to use
let someVar = dict["key"]
println("Some words \(someVar)")