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#!/bin/sh | |
# So you've installed XCode 6 Beta | |
# Now we could use Swift toolchain to build a minimal | |
# command line Hellow World | |
# let's set new Developer Toolchain bundled with Xcode6-Beta.app | |
# as default toolchain | |
# sudo xcode-select -s /Applications/Xcode6-Beta.app/Contents/Developer | |
# alias for Swift binary | |
# export SWIFT=/Applications/Xcode6-Beta.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/bin/swift | |
# simple program | |
#echo 'println("Hello World")' > swifthello.swift | |
# build stuff | |
#$SWIFT -sdk $(xcrun --show-sdk-path --sdk macosx) swifthello.swift | |
## Thanks to @caius, lines 10-17 now obsolete. Just use `xcrun' | |
echo 'println("Hello World")' > swifthello.swift | |
xcrun swift swifthello.swift | |
# run stuff | |
./swifthello | |
# By the way, Swift had a lot of options, invoke with `xcrun swift --help' | |
# Hope that helps |
Yes it can, but implicitly the code is compiled.
"The Swift REPL (Read-Eval-Print-Loop) acts like an interpreter. Valid statements, expressions, and declarations are immediately compiled and executed."
to produce an actual executable:
swiftc script.swift -o myprogram
./myprogram
When I tried this, it couldn't find println
, but I swapped it with print
and it worked. Also note that I seem to have swift
as a binary in /usr/bin/swift
, so for me it was just echo 'print("Hello World")' > hw.swift && swift hw.swift
. Amusingly, since running swift
without args starts a repl, which reads from stdin, I was also able to echo 'print("Hello World")' | swift
Below example is more simpler :
hello.swift
print("Hello World");
then
swift hello.swift
output
Hello World
or you could do this:
echo print("Yo Planet") | swift
Welcome to Apple Swift version 3.1 (swiftlang-802.0.53 clang-802.0.42). Type :help for assistance.
Yo Planet
Can't figure out how to suppress the welcome blurb, there is no -q (aka quiet) argument.
Thanks to a recent tweet from @SwiftDevs I also learned that a .swift file like this can be run as a script, i.e. without explicit compilation, e.g. by including a hash-bang line like this:
!/usr/bin/xcrun swift -i