34

I have this code that creates a view and applies a gradient to it.

import UIKit
import QuartzCore


let rect : CGRect = CGRectMake(0,0,320,100)

var vista : UIView = UIView(frame: rect)

let gradient : CAGradientLayer = CAGradientLayer()
gradient.frame = vista.bounds

let cor1 = UIColor.blackColor()
let cor2 = UIColor.whiteColor()

let arrayColors = [cor1.CGColor, cor2.CGColor]

gradient.colors = arrayColors

view.layer.insertSublayer(gradient, atIndex:0)

Xcode is giving me no compile error, but the code is crashing on the line

let arrayColors = [cor1.CGColor, cor2.CGColor]

with the message array element cannot be bridged to Objective-C

In fact I was expecting it to crash there, because I am not sure how I can create an array of CGColors on Swift. The surprise here is Xcode mentioning Objective-C. In my mind I was creating a CGColorRef in swift...

Any clues? Why is it mentioning Objective-C and how do I solve this?

2

5 Answers 5

29

The reason Objective-C is mentioned is because UIKit and QuartzCore are Objective-C frameworks. In particular, gradient.colors = arrayColors is calling an Objective-C method that expects an NSArray.

This seems like a bug, as Apple's documentation makes it sound like that the array should auto-bridge to an NSArray so long as the items in the array can be considered AnyObject:

When you bridge from a Swift array to an NSArray object, the elements in the Swift array must be AnyObject compatible. For example, a Swift array of type Int[] contains Int structure elements. The Int type is not an instance of a class, but because the Int type bridges to the NSNumber class, the Int type is AnyObject compatible. Therefore, you can bridge a Swift array of type Int[] to an NSArray object. If an element in a Swift array is not AnyObject compatible, a runtime error occurs when you bridge to an NSArray object.

You can also create an NSArray object directly from a Swift array literal, following the same bridging rules outlined above. When you explicitly type a constant or variable as an NSArray object and assign it an array literal, Swift creates an NSArray object instead of a Swift array.

For now, a work around would be either to declare arrayColors as an NSArray:

let arrayColors: NSArray = [cor1.CGColor, cor2.CGColor]

Or to declare it as taking AnyObject:

let arrayColors: Array <AnyObject> = [cor1.CGColor, cor2.CGColor]

4
  • ah, I see. I did not understand the second line of code. What are you saying there? make me an array where every element is <AnyObject>? but this is not the default behavior?
    – Duck
    Jun 9, 2014 at 4:07
  • 1
    The default behavior is that the array items are whatever you place into the array. e.g. only strings, integers, etc. In this case it only takes CGColorRef, which is what the CGColor method returns. AnyObject would be any mix of types, so long as they are AnyObject compatible, rather than a single type. As the bridging requires the ability to move the array type to AnyObject, declaring it as such from the get go gets us over the Objective-C bridging issue. Jun 9, 2014 at 4:15
  • Yeah, there's a lot to absorb with Swift and it's going to evolve over the next several months. I'm guessing the Objective-C bridge is going to have a fair number of gotchas for the time being... I'd suggest to try playing with arrays by creating a variable array of strings and then trying to add an integer. Then, declare the array as taking AnyObject and see what happens. Also, checkout the Integrating Swift with Objective-C and the Swift Interoperability In Depth talks at developer.apple.com/videos/wwdc/2014 The system frameworks are still Objective-C frameworks.... Jun 9, 2014 at 4:25
  • thanks but later I realized that the gradient function I was using is pretty strange. Even it being a ObjC object the gradient color is defined in CGColorRef what means that the gradient drawing methos is, as expected, written in C as most of Quartz so, the gradient itself appears to be just a ObjC wrapper to C. I feel that this swift change is the first step to merge iOS and OSX in terms of frameworks. It is unproductive having NSColor/UIColor, NSRect/CGRect and stuff like that.
    – Duck
    Jun 9, 2014 at 17:56
19

This runtime error can also be triggered if it tries to bridge an array of type [MySwiftProtocol] over to Objective-C.

The solution is to mark your protocol with @objc:

@objc protocol MySwiftProtocol {
   // ...
}
1
  • 2
    I extended an Objective-C class to conform to a Swift protocol, and was unable to bridge an array of that class type to the protocol type until doing this. The error I had was slightly different: "fatal error: array cannot be bridged from Objective-C". May 6, 2015 at 15:13
4

I found that I could fix the problem by explicitly using CGColorRef rather than CGColor for my colours, e.g.:

    var bottomColour:CGColorRef = UIColor.redColor().CGColor
    var topColour:CGColorRef = UIColor(red: 255.0/255.0, green: 123.0/255.0, blue: 37.0/255.0, alpha: 1.0).CGColor

    gradientLayer.colors = [bottomColour, topColour]

...worked fine, without any NSArray or AnyObject casting. If I take out the explicit CGColorRef in the type declarations for the colours, I get the "array element cannot be bridged to Objective-C" error.

1
  • That worked. Thanks. Should be the actual answer for this question
    – KD.
    Oct 11, 2014 at 13:28
3

With Swift arrays, you can call bridgeToObjectiveC() on them, and they'll turn into NSArrays. The same is true of Swift dictionaries.

0
2

For anyone trying to get this to work in Swift, you can do the following:

let arrayColors: NSArray = [UIColor.blackColor().CGColor as AnyObject, UIColor.clearColor().CGColor as AnyObject]

I noticed that in my Objective-C code that I was casting the CGColorRef types to id. Not sure why though. If anyone has a reason why that would be great!

1
  • 1
    The reason why CGColorRef can be bridged to id is because CGColorRef can use Objective C/Cocoa retain-release functions. Under Objective C/ARC, this would need to be bridged, but Swift can handle the memory of a CoreFoundation object automatically. Oct 9, 2014 at 20:15

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