38

Is there a function to determine the variable type in Swift? I presume there might be something like like type() in Python.

I'd like a way to judge if a variable is a Foundation object or C variable in Swift. Like NSString vs String, or NSArray vs array. So that I can log it out in console and see clearly what it is.

For example, I would like to know the type inferred for the the first array below:

var array = [1,2,3]  // by default NSArray or array?
var array:[Int] = [1,2,3]
var array:NSArray = [1,2,3]
var array:Array<Any> = [1,2,3]

I have seen answers for judging if a given variable is a kind of given type in this question, but I'll say it's quite different from what I want to ask.

6
  • Not that I know of , but you can roll down your own?
    – Ali Gajani
    Jun 7, 2014 at 3:51
  • I have edited question to make my statement more clear
    – piaChai
    Jun 7, 2014 at 4:04
  • Could you give an example of the type of code where you'd like to use this knowledge? If the type is known at compile-time, you could probably use a generic function, something like func show<T>(x:T) { println("\(x) is of type \(T)" }. If it's not known as at compile-time, I'm not sure if this would even be possible, since it doesn't seem like a C value would have the necessary runtime metadata. (Sadly I can't try this for myself because Apple still hasn't approved my developer account.)
    – Jeremy
    Jun 7, 2014 at 4:12
  • 1
    I do not agree with closing this question as a duplicate of How to get Type of an Object in Swift. Even though the question as written would be an appropriate duplicate, the reality is that all of the answers, including the accepted answer, only address determining whether a value is of a given type. Unless the asker of that other question wants to un-accept that answer, I think it's only reasonable that they narrow the question to be about checking if a value is of a given type, making it distinct from this question.
    – Jeremy
    Jun 7, 2014 at 4:53
  • I agree,determine a given type and determine the type directly are just not the same
    – piaChai
    Jun 7, 2014 at 5:17

5 Answers 5

26

You can get a reference to the type object of a value by using the .dynamicType property. This is equivalent to Python's type() function, and is mentioned in the Swift documentation under Language Reference: Types: Metatype Type.

var intArray = [1, 2, 3]
let typeOfArray = intArray.dynamicType

With this type object, we are able to create a new instance of the same array type.

var newArray = typeOfArray()
newArray.append(5)
newArray.append(6)
println(newArray)
[5, 6]

We can see that this new value is of the same type ([Int]) by attempting to append a float:

newArray.append(1.5)
error: type 'Int' does not conform to protocol 'FloatLiteralConvertible'

If we import Cocoa and use an array literal with mixed types, we can see that an NSArray is created:

import Cocoa

var mixedArray = [1, "2"]
let mixedArrayType = mixedArray.dynamicType

var newArray = mixedArrayType()
var mutableArray = newArray.mutableCopy() as NSMutableArray

mutableArray.addObject(1)
mutableArray.addObject(1.5)
mutableArray.addObject("2")

println(mutableArray)
(1, "1.5", 2)

However, at this point there does not seem to be any general way to generate a string description of a type object, so this may not serve the debugging role that you were asking about.

Types derived from NSObject do have a .description() method, as is used in SiLo's answer,

println(mixedArrayType.description())
__NSArrayI

However this is not present on types such as Swift's built-in arrays.

println(typeOfArray.description())
error: '[Int].Type' does not have a member named 'description'
3
  • BTW: instead of obj.description(), you can always use String(obj) (this will use the description if it is available).
    – Tali
    Sep 11, 2015 at 11:03
  • 6
    .dynamicType is deprecated now. typeof equivalent is now type(of: myvariable)
    – xiay
    Sep 22, 2016 at 7:04
  • @logicor Thanks for the info. Want to suggest an edit to this post (so you'll get credit for the addition)? If not, I'll edit it in myself later.
    – Jeremy
    Sep 22, 2016 at 17:57
24

option+click the variable you'd like to examine.

enter image description here

1
  • Doesn't answer the question, but it does answer the question that brought me here. Nov 22, 2023 at 23:34
10

It is possible to do so, though it's not necessarily that easy nor useful:

func getClassName(obj : AnyObject) -> String
{
    let objectClass : AnyClass! = object_getClass(obj)
    let className = objectClass.description()

    return className
}

let swiftArray = [1, 2, 3]
let swiftDictionary = ["Name": "John Doe"]
let cocoaArray : NSArray = [10, 20, 30]
var mutableCocoaArray = NSMutableArray()

println(getClassName(swiftArray))
println(getClassName(swiftDictionary))
println(getClassName(cocoaArray))
println(getClassName(mutableCocoaArray))

Output:

_TtCSs22ContiguousArrayStorage00007F88D052EF58
__NSDictionaryM
__NSArrayI
__NSArrayM

You are better of using the is and as keywords in Swift. Many foundation classes use class clusters (as you can see with __NSArrayI (immutable) and __NSArrayM (mutable).

Notice the interesting behavior. The swiftArray defaults to using a Swift Array<Int> while the swiftDictionary defaulted to NSMutableDictionary. With this kind of behavior I would not really rely on anything being a certain type (check first).

1
  • 2
    Why not just use object_getClassName?
    – Brian
    Jul 1, 2014 at 16:37
9

Someone mentioned this above, but I think it deserves visibility as an answer rather than a comment. You can now simply use type(of: ___):

var red, green, blue: Double
print(type(of: green))

yields

Double

0

I use breakpoints during debuging but if you need to check if they match a certain type during runtime then drewag is right

another thing you can do is test datatype with assertion this would only work in debugging but with assertion you can set conditions which if met app crashes

maybe something like assert(let tArray == oldArray as? NSArray[] //if not NSArray app crashes)

1
  • This checks if a var is of a specific type, not what type it is. Thanks for your input.
    – user5306470
    Oct 15, 2017 at 13:06

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