The idea of type-safe numeric values, in other words, Measurements
sounds great but, alas, the ergonomics are poor. At least until
now. Wouldn’t it be great to do this
let m: Mass = 123(.kilograms) + 17(.stones)
// or let m = Mass(123, .kilograms) + 17(.stones)
m.converted(to: .pounds) // 509.1688786398349 lb
instead of this?
let m = Measurement(value: 123, unit: UnitMass.kilograms)
let m2 = m + Measurement(value: 17, unit: UnitMass.stones)
print (m2.converted(to: .pounds)) // 509.1688786398349 lb
In addition to its verboseness, the Foundation Unit and Measurement
APIs also lack the ability to dynamically declare compound units.
This can make it difficult to perform dimensional analysis
and other multi-step calculations.
The Ratio structure allows you to express the ratio
between two units in a type-safe manner
Multiplying a measurement with one unit type by a rate
whose denominator is that same unit type causes those types to cancel out,
resulting in a measurement with the numerator type.
Usage
For example, volume over time multiplied by time yields volume:
// Ratio of Measures
typealias FlowRate = Ratio<UnitVolume, UnitDuration>
let rate: FlowRate = 84760(.cubicFeet, per: .seconds)
let dailyFlow = (rate * 24(.hours)).converted(to: .megaliters)
// -> ~ 207371ML
Installation
Swift Package Manager
Add the Rate package to your target dependencies in Package.swift:
AnyMeasure
Swift For Any Measure: Simplified A clean, Swift interface for
Foundation.Measurement
Read my post about it here.
Requirements: Swift 4.0+
Motivation
The idea of type-safe numeric values, in other words,
Measurements
sounds great but, alas, the ergonomics are poor. At least until now. Wouldn’t it be great to do thisinstead of this?
In addition to its verboseness, the Foundation Unit and Measurement APIs also lack the ability to dynamically declare compound units. This can make it difficult to perform dimensional analysis and other multi-step calculations.
The
Ratio
structure allows you to express the ratio between two units in a type-safe manner Multiplying a measurement with one unit type by a rate whose denominator is that same unit type causes those types to cancel out, resulting in a measurement with the numerator type.Usage
For example, volume over time multiplied by time yields volume:
Installation
Swift Package Manager
Add the Rate package to your target dependencies in
Package.swift
:Then run the
swift build
command to build your project.Contact
License Information
MIT - See LICENSE.md
Credits
Thanks to
Other Resources
https://github.com/hyperjeff/Physical