13

I am trying replicate some Objective C cocoa in Swift. All is good until I come across the following:

// Set a new type and creator:
unsigned long type = 'TEXT';
unsigned long creator = 'pdos';

How can I create Int64s (or the correct Swift equivalent) from single quote character literals like this?

Types:

public typealias AEKeyword = FourCharCode
public typealias OSType = FourCharCode
public typealias FourCharCode = UInt32
6
  • Use the math, Luke: 'T' * 0x100000 + 'E' * 0x1000 + 'X' * 0x100 + 'T'.
    – Kerrek SB
    Jul 9, 2015 at 14:24
  • 3
    That is a "FourCharCode", a special case of a multi-byte character constant. As far as I know these are not known to Swift. Conversion functions from/to strings are here: stackoverflow.com/a/25625744/1187415.
    – Martin R
    Jul 9, 2015 at 14:28
  • Thanks for pointing me in the right direction, that's allowed me to answer my own question! Jul 9, 2015 at 14:48
  • You forgot to add a COBOL and Algol tag. Jul 9, 2015 at 14:53
  • Haha sorry, I didn't know if it was a C or Objective C thing.... Jul 9, 2015 at 15:14

7 Answers 7

10

I'm using this in my Cocoa Scripting apps, it considers characters > 0x80 correctly

func OSTypeFrom(string : String) -> UInt {
  var result : UInt = 0
  if let data = string.dataUsingEncoding(NSMacOSRomanStringEncoding) {
    let bytes = UnsafePointer<UInt8>(data.bytes)
    for i in 0..<data.length {
      result = result << 8 + UInt(bytes[i])
    }
  }
  return result
}

Edit:

Alternatively

func fourCharCodeFrom(string : String) -> FourCharCode
{
  assert(string.count == 4, "String length must be 4")
  var result : FourCharCode = 0
  for char in string.utf16 {
    result = (result << 8) + FourCharCode(char)
  }
  return result
}

or still swiftier

func fourCharCode(from string : String) -> FourCharCode
{
  return string.utf16.reduce(0, {$0 << 8 + FourCharCode($1)})
}
1
  • OSTypeFrom fails on strings longer than 4 characters, meantime macOS built-in NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType returns 0 fourCharCode converts characters without encoding, e.g. it results fourCharCode(from: "€©ß")==0x1FACA9DF while it should be NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType("'€©ß'")) == 0xF0DBA9A7 Feb 23, 2020 at 22:29
6

I found the following typealiases from the Swift API:

typealias FourCharCode = UInt32
typealias OSType = FourCharCode

And the following functions:

func NSFileTypeForHFSTypeCode(hfsFileTypeCode: OSType) -> String!
func NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType(fileTypeString: String!) -> OSType

This should allow me to create the equivalent code:

let type : UInt32 = UInt32(NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType("TEXT"))
let creator : UInt32 = UInt32(NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType("pdos"))

But those 4-character strings doesn't work and return 0.

If you wrap each string in ' single quotes ' and call the same functions, you will get the correct return values:

let type : UInt32 = UInt32(NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType("'TEXT'"))
let creator : UInt32 = UInt32(NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType("'pdos'"))
3
  • I get always 0 using NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType in Swift
    – vadian
    Jul 9, 2015 at 16:19
  • 2
    Same here - will accept your answer instead - leaving this here so people know that it exists but doesn;t work. Jul 10, 2015 at 11:42
  • 2
    This works if you make sure to surround the code in single quotes: NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType("'TEXT'").
    – Wevah
    Mar 8, 2020 at 17:47
4

Adopt the ExpressibleByStringLiteral protocol to use four-character string literals directly:

extension FourCharCode: ExpressibleByStringLiteral {
    
    public init(stringLiteral value: StringLiteralType) {
        if let data = value.data(using: .macOSRoman), data.count == 4 {
            self = data.reduce(0, {$0 << 8 + Self($1)})
        } else {
            self = 0
        }
    }
   
}

Now you can just pass a string literal as the FourCharCode / OSType / UInt32 parameter:

let record = NSAppleEventDescriptor.record()
record.setDescriptor(NSAppleEventDescriptor(boolean: true), forKeyword: "test")
2

In Swift 4 or later, I use this code - if the string is not 4 characters in size, it will return an OSType(0):

extension String {
    public func osType() -> OSType {
       var result:UInt = 0

       if let data = self.data(using: .macOSRoman), data.count == 4
       {
            data.withUnsafeBytes { (ptr:UnsafePointer<UInt8>) in
                for i in 0..<data.count {
                    result = result << 8 + UInt(ptr[i])
                }
            }
       }

       return OSType(result)
    }
}

let type = "APPL".osType()                 // 1095782476

// check if this is OK in a playground
let hexStr = String(format: "0x%lx", type) // 0x4150504c -> "APPL" in ASCII
1
  • 2
    NB: Using .macOSRoman — as is done here — is correct. This matters for certain codes like ƒhlp.
    – Wevah
    Mar 8, 2020 at 18:33
1

Swift 5 Update:

extension String {
    func osType() -> OSType {
        return OSType(
            data(using: .macOSRoman)?
                .withUnsafeBytes {
                    $0.reduce(into: UInt(0)) { $0 = $0 << 8 + UInt($1) }
                } ?? 0
        )
    }
}
0

Here's a simple function

func mbcc(foo: String) -> Int
{
    let chars = foo.utf8
    var result: Int = 0
    for aChar in chars
    {
        result = result << 8 + Int(aChar)
    }
    return result
}

let a = mbcc("TEXT")

print(String(format: "0x%lx", a)) // Prints 0x54455854

It will work for strings that will fit in an Int. Once they get longer it starts losing digits from the top.

If you use

result = result * 256 + Int(aChar)

you should get a crash when the string gets too big instead.

0

Using NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType does work, but only for 4-character strings wrapped with single quotes, aka 6-character strings. It returns 0 for unquoted 4-character strings.

So wrap your 4-character string in ' ' before passing it to the function:

extension FourCharCode: ExpressibleByStringLiteral {
    
    public init(stringLiteral value: StringLiteralType) {
        switch (value.count, value.first, value.last) {
        case (6, "'", "'"):
            self = NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType(value)
        case (4, _, _):
            self = NSHFSTypeCodeFromFileType("'\(value)'")
        default:
            self = 0
        }
    }
    
}

Using the above extension, you can use 4-character or single-quoted 6-character string literals:

let record = NSAppleEventDescriptor.record()
record.setDescriptor(NSAppleEventDescriptor(boolean: true), forKeyword: "4444")
record.setDescriptor(NSAppleEventDescriptor(boolean: true), forKeyword: "'6666'")

It would be even better to limit the string literal to 4-character strings at compile time. That does not seem to currently be possible, but is being discussed for Swift here:

Allow for Compile-Time Checked Intervals for Parameters Expecting Literal Values

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