I'm going to go off on a bit of a tangent so you understand what is going on.
Strings are not objects in swift. !!!
Kinda. ???
Because of the way toll-free bridging works... if you import the Objective-C runtime then you can treat strings as an object... check this out:
This code will not compile at all:
// Playground - noun: a place where people can play
// import Foundation
var foo: AnyObject = "hello"
^ Type 'String' does not conform to protocol 'AnyObject'
But if I uncomment the Foundation framework, then it compiles perfectly fine, because we're activating bridging between String and NSString:
// Playground - noun: a place where people can play
import Foundation
var foo: AnyObject = "hello" // We're all good here!
And if you want to check if foo is a string... you can do this:
import Foundation
var foo: AnyObject = "hello"
foo.isKindOfClass(NSString) // this returns true
So... string is not an object but if you treat it as one it will be converted into an NSString
and now it is an object. But you can't check if an object belongs to the String
class, because there is no such thing as a String
object. You have to use NSString
.
Of course, you should still be doing what Scott said in his answer, by using the is
or as?
keywords.