RankPreference
enum RankPreferenceextension SearchByTextRequest.RankPreference : CaseIterable, Equatable, Hashable, Identifiable, SendableHow results will be ranked in the response.
-
Returns a Boolean value indicating whether two values are equal.
Equality is the inverse of inequality. For any values
aandb,a == bimplies thata != bisfalse.Declaration
Swift
static func == (a: SearchByTextRequest.RankPreference, b: SearchByTextRequest.RankPreference) -> Bool -
A type that can represent a collection of all values of this type.
Declaration
Swift
typealias AllCases = [SearchByTextRequest.RankPreference] -
A type representing the stable identity of the entity associated with an instance.
Declaration
Swift
typealias ID = SearchByTextRequest.RankPreference -
A collection of all values of this type.
Declaration
Swift
nonisolated static var allCases: [SearchByTextRequest.RankPreference] { get } -
Declaration
Swift
case distance -
Hashes the essential components of this value by feeding them into the given hasher.
Implement this method to conform to the
Hashableprotocol. The components used for hashing must be the same as the components compared in your type’s==operator implementation. Callhasher.combine(_:)with each of these components.Important
In your implementation of
hash(into:), don’t callfinalize()on thehasherinstance provided, or replace it with a different instance. Doing so may become a compile-time error in the future.Declaration
Swift
func hash(into hasher: inout Hasher) -
The hash value.
Hash values are not guaranteed to be equal across different executions of your program. Do not save hash values to use during a future execution.
Important
hashValueis deprecated as aHashablerequirement. To conform toHashable, implement thehash(into:)requirement instead. The compiler provides an implementation forhashValuefor you.Declaration
Swift
var hashValue: Int { get } -
The stable identity of the entity associated with this instance.
Declaration
Swift
var id: SearchByTextRequest.RankPreference { get } -
Declaration
Swift
case relevance