Swift: Creating an array of UIImage

You are declaring the type for logoImages but not creating an instance of that type.

Use var logoImages = UIImage[]() which will create a new array for you.

...and then after creating a new empty Array instance, as described in the answer by @Jiaaro you can't use subscripting to add to an empty array


var image : UIImage = UIImage(named:"logo.png")    
var logoImages = [image]

You have two problems (and without a regex!)

1. You aren't creating an array. You need to do:

var logoImages: [UIImage] = []

or

var logoImages: Array<UIImage> = []

or

var logoImages = [UIImage]()

or

var logoImages = Array<UIImage>()

2. If you want to add new objects to an array, you should use Array.append() or some of the equivalent syntactic sugar:

logoImages.append(UIImage(named: "logo.png")!)

or

logoImages += [UIImage(named: "logo.png")!]

or

logoImages += [UIImage(named: "logo.png")!, UIImage(named: "logo2.png")!]

You need to append to the array because (excerpt from docs):

You can’t use subscript syntax to append a new item to the end of an array. If you try to use subscript syntax to retrieve or set a value for an index that is outside of an array’s existing bounds, you will trigger a runtime error. However, you can check that an index is valid before using it, by comparing it to the array’s count property. Except when count is 0 (meaning the array is empty), the largest valid index in an array will always be count - 1, because arrays are indexed from zero.

Of course you could always simplify it when possible:

var logoImage: [UIImage] = [
    UIImage(named: "logo1.png")!,
    UIImage(named: "logo2.png")!
]

edit: Note that UIImage now has a "failable" initializer, meaning that it returns an optional. I've updated all the bits of code to reflect this change as well as changes to the array syntax.