Swift enums are very different from Obj-C (or C) enums and they can't be passed directly to Obj-C.
As a workaround, you can declare your method with an Int
parameter.
func newsCellDidSelectButton(cell: NewsCell, actionType: Int)
and pass it as NewsCellActionType.Vote.toRaw()
. You won't be able to access the enum names from Obj-C though and it makes the code much more difficult.
A better solution might be to implement the enum in Obj-C (for example, in your briding header) because then it will be automatically accessible in Swift and it will be possible to pass it as a parameter.
EDIT
It is not required to add @objc
simply to use it for an Obj-C class. If your code is pure Swift, you can use enums without problems, see the following example as a proof:
enum NewsCellActionType : Int {
case Vote = 0
case Comments
case Time
}
protocol NewsCellDelegate {
func newsCellDidSelectButton(cell: UITableViewCell?, actionType: NewsCellActionType )
}
@UIApplicationMain
class AppDelegate: UIResponder, UIApplicationDelegate, NewsCellDelegate {
var window: UIWindow?
func application(application: UIApplication, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: NSDictionary?) -> Bool {
self.window = UIWindow(frame: UIScreen.mainScreen().bounds)
self.window!.backgroundColor = UIColor.whiteColor()
self.window!.makeKeyAndVisible()
test()
return true;
}
func newsCellDidSelectButton(cell: UITableViewCell?, actionType: NewsCellActionType) {
println(actionType.toRaw());
}
func test() {
self.newsCellDidSelectButton(nil, actionType: NewsCellActionType.Vote)
}
}