37

This line of code used to work with Swift 2, but now is incorrect in Swift 3.

if gestureRecognizer.isMember(of: UITapGestureRecognizer) { }

I get this error: Expected member name or constructor call after type name.

What is the correct way to use isMember(of:)?

5
  • 1
    What fix-its does the compiler offer you? ;)
    – Hamish
    Nov 2, 2016 at 19:41
  • this if gestureRecognizer.isMember(of: UITapGestureRecognizer()) { } which doesn't work. Nov 2, 2016 at 20:13
  • Click on the red octagon, the compiler will show you two fix-its (one of them solves your problem :) )
    – Hamish
    Nov 2, 2016 at 20:14
  • 1
    @VanDuTran Has your answer be satisfied?
    – Alexander
    Dec 13, 2016 at 17:02
  • See this answer May 23, 2019 at 10:24

4 Answers 4

138

Most likely, you'll want to not only check the type, but also cast to that type. In this case, use:

if let gestureRecognizer as? UITapGestureRecognizer { }
else { /* not a UITapGestureRecognizer */ }

Swift casting operators

These operators are only available in Swift, but still work when dealing with Objective C types.

  • The as operator

    • The as operator performs a cast when it is known at compile time that the cast always succeeds, such as upcasting or bridging. Upcasting lets you use an expression as an instance of its type’s supertype, without using an intermediate variable.

    • This is the most preferable operator to use, when possible. It guarentees success, without worrying about unwrapping an optional or risking a crash.
  • The as? operator

    • The as? operator performs a conditional cast of the expression to the specified type. The as? operator returns an optional of the specified type. At runtime, if the cast succeeds, the value of expression is wrapped in an optional and returned; otherwise, the value returned is nil. If casting to the specified type is guaranteed to fail or is guaranteed to succeed, a compile-time error is raised.

    • This is the second most preferable operator to use. Use it to safely handle the case in which a casting operator can't be performed.

  • The as! operator

    • The as! operator performs a forced cast of the expression to the specified type. The as! operator returns a value of the specified type, not an optional type. If the cast fails, a runtime error is raised. The behavior of x as! T is the same as the behavior of (x as? T)!.

    • This is the least preferable operator to use. I strongly advise against abusing it. Attempting to cast an expression to an incompatible type crashes your program.


Swift type checking

If you merely want to check the type of an expression, without casting to that type, then you can use these approaches. They are only available in Swift, but still work when dealing with Objective C types.

  • The is operator

    • The is operator checks at runtime whether the expression can be cast to the specified type. It returns true if the expression can be cast to the specified type; otherwise, it returns false
    • Works on any Swift type, including Objective C types.
    • Swift equivalent of isKind(of:)
  • Using type(of:)

    • Unlike the is operator, this can be used to check the exact type, without consideration for subclasses.
    • Can be used like: type(of: instance) == DesiredType.self
    • Swift equivalent of isMember(of:)

Legacy (Objective C) methods for checking types

These are all methods on NSObjectProtocol. They can be used in Swift code, but they only apply work with classes that derive from NSObjectProtocol (such as subclasses of NSObject). I advise against using these, but I mention them here for completeness

  • isKind(of:)

    • Returns a Boolean value that indicates whether the receiver is an instance of given class or an instance of any class that inherits from that class
    • Avoid this in Swift, use is operator instead.
  • isMember(of:)

    • Returns a Boolean value that indicates whether the receiver is an instance of a given class
    • Avoid this in Swift, use type(of: instance) == DesiredType.self instead.
  • conforms(to:)

    • Returns a Boolean value that indicates whether the receiver conforms to a given protocol.
    • Avoid this in Swift, use is operator instead.
13
  • 1
    Huh, weird. Looks like the string literal is messing with the compiler somehow. type(of: String()) == String.self works fine. It also works if you assign it first... let f = type(of: ""); if f == String.self {}
    – Hamish
    Nov 2, 2016 at 19:59
  • 1
    @Hamish Hmm, interesting.
    – Alexander
    Nov 2, 2016 at 20:09
  • 1
    No problem – that edit just then was the last one, I promise ;)
    – Hamish
    Nov 2, 2016 at 20:25
  • 1
    @AlexZavatone Neither of those would work, nor does it make sense. Swift is a statically typed language. All types in the program have to be resolved at compile time. When you cast to type(of: myObj), it's not known at compile time what type you're casting to (because myObj can be anything), so it doesn't provide any value what do ever. If you think about it, what methods/properties can you expect to use, on a variable whose type isn't known until runtime?
    – Alexander
    May 24, 2019 at 16:28
  • 1
    @xaphod It doesn't matter that the right hand type is known at compile time. It just matters that it is a type, whether known (a concrete type), or unknown (a generic that won't be known until runtime). Using is with tType: Animal.Type fails, because tType is a metatype object, not a type. You just need a generic to solve your problem. See gist.github.com/xaphod/…
    – Alexander
    Nov 28, 2019 at 15:18
20

There are several ways to check the class of an object. Most of the time you will want to use either the is or the as? operators like so:

let gestureRecognizer: UIGestureRecognizer = UITapGestureRecognizer()

// Using the is operator
if gestureRecognizer is UITapGestureRecognizer {
    // You know that the object is an instance of UITapGestureRecognizer,
    // but the compiler will not let you use UITapGestureRecognizer specific
    // methods or properties on gestureRecognizer because the type of the
    // variable is still UIGestureRecognizer
    print("Here")
}

// Using the as? operator and optional binding
if let tapGestureRecognizer = gestureRecognizer as? UITapGestureRecognizer {
    // tapGestureRecognizer is the same object as gestureRecognizer and is
    // of type UITapGestureRecognizer, you can use UITapGestureRecognizer
    // specific methods or properties.
    print("Here")
}

// Using the type(of:) global function
if type(of: gestureRecognizer) == UITapGestureRecognizer.self {
    // gestureRecognizer is an instance of UITapGestureRecognizer, but not any
    // of its subclasses (if gestureRecognizer was an instance of a subclass of
    // UITapGestureRecognizer, the body of this if would not execute).
    // This kind of check is rarely usefull, be sure this is really what you
    // want to do before you use it.
    print("Here")
}

// Using the isKind(of:) method
if gestureRecognizer.isKind(of: UITapGestureRecognizer.self) {
    // Like for the is operator, you know that the object is an instance of
    // UITapGestureRecognizer (or any subclass of UITapGestureRecognizer).
    // This is the Objective-C version of the is operator and will only work
    // on classes that inherit from NSObject, don't use it in Swift.
    print("Here")
}

// Using the isMember(of:) method
if gestureRecognizer.isMember(of: UITapGestureRecognizer.self) {
    // gestureRecognizer is an instance of UITapGestureRecognizer, but not
    // any of its subclasses.
    // This is the Objective-C version of type(of:) and will only work on
    // classes that inherit from NSObject, don't use it in Swift.
    print("Here")
}
5

You have to use .self to refer the class type now.

let a = UITapGestureRecognizer()
print (a.isMember(of: UIGestureRecognizer.self))

There is also:

print (a is UITapGestureRecognizer)
3

Swift 3:

if gestureRecognizer is UITapGestureRecognizer {
            //It's a tap
}
3
  • 1
    How to check is Not Dec 19, 2017 at 9:30
  • 1
    @RakeshiOSDev just enclose the statement in a bracket preceded by "!" like if !(gestureRecognizer is UITapGestureRecognizer) Dec 28, 2017 at 11:33
  • 1
    I read "It's a trap", and then got super sad when I re-read it. Feb 23, 2019 at 20:11

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