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> (greater than) operator is a binary relational operator that evaluates whether the left-hand operand is strictly greater than the right-hand operand, returning a Bool value.
Type Requirements and Comparable
For nominal types, both the left-hand side (lhs) and right-hand side (rhs) operands must be of the exact same type, and that type must conform to the Comparable protocol.
Under the hood, the operator is defined as a static method within the protocol:
Comparable receive the > operator automatically. This is not achieved through compiler synthesis, but rather provided as a standard default implementation via a protocol extension on Comparable. The standard library evaluates lhs > rhs by internally executing rhs < lhs. Therefore, a type only needs to satisfy the core Comparable requirements (< and ==) to unlock the > operator.
Evaluation Mechanics by Type
- Numeric Types: Performs a standard mathematical magnitude comparison (e.g.,
Int,Double,Float). - Strings: Performs a strict, case-sensitive comparison based on the canonical equivalence of Unicode scalar values. This means characters that are linguistically identical are evaluated as equal, regardless of their underlying Unicode scalar composition (e.g., a single precomposed scalar versus a decomposed base scalar plus a combining scalar).
- Tuples: Tuples are structural types and do not conform to protocols in Swift, including
Comparable. However, the standard library provides overloaded>functions specifically for tuples, provided all corresponding elements in both tuples are of the sameComparabletype. As of Swift 5.9 (which introduced value and type parameter packs), the previous six-element limit was removed, allowing tuples of any arity to be compared. The evaluation proceeds left-to-right and terminates at the first pair of elements that are not equal. - Arrays: The
>operator is not supported forArraytypes. In Swift,Arraydoes not conform toComparable. Attempting to evaluate[1, 2] > [0, 3]results in a compiler error. To compare arrays lexicographically, developers must instead use thelexicographicallyPrecedes(_:)method.
Operator Precedence
The> operator belongs to the ComparisonPrecedence group. It has a lower precedence than nil-coalescing, casting, and mathematical operators, but a higher precedence than logical conjunction (&&) and disjunction (||) operators. It is non-associative, meaning you cannot chain multiple > operators together in a single expression without parentheses (e.g., a > b > c is invalid syntax).
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