47

Calling a method from its name (in a String format) can be sometimes useful.
In Swift it is recomended to change behavior and to use closures to do something "dynamically", so for example you can have a dictionary of functions, with the name as the key, and the implementation as the value.
However, sometimes you want to simply know "how to do it", and this is the reason of this question.
So, how to call dynamically a Swift method starting from it's name as string?

In Objective C it was simple:

[self performSelector:NSSelectorFromString(@"aSelector")];

But performSelector is banned in Swift
Is there any alternative?

10
  • 1
    Just wondering why you deleted your answer? Nothing wrong with Q&A
    – Tim
    Commented Jun 16, 2014 at 14:15
  • 6
    Swift is mostly a static language with strong typing and no real reflection. This kind of dynamic behavior is unsafe and thus to be avoided in Swift. Swift doesn't support it in any way right now. Also, it doesn't work well with ARC (even in Obj-C it triggers warning). You can make Obj-C workarounds in Swift but there is no real Swift solution because Swift doesn't like this kind of things.
    – Sulthan
    Commented Jun 16, 2014 at 14:18
  • 4
    @holex , I've read all the docs and analyzed Swift in every detail ;-) and this is the reason why I wrote this Q&A (do you see? There is my answer below) with a solution that, by now, is not available on any other site.
    – LombaX
    Commented Jun 16, 2014 at 14:32
  • 1
    I know it!! Do you understand that the question has been posted only to attach THE ANSWER, in a Q&A style? Moreover, to confirm what you are saying, my question begans with this statement: "In Swift it is recomended to change behavior". But the meaning of the Q&A is different: understand how it works and why
    – LombaX
    Commented Jun 16, 2014 at 14:42
  • 8
    @holex, Q+A style questions are encouraged in the Stackoverflow community, he specifically asked the question to provide an answer himself for people who maybe wondering the same.
    – Tim
    Commented Jun 16, 2014 at 16:14

3 Answers 3

38

In Swift, you should use closures and change your approach. However, if you want to use performSelector to dynamically call a method given only it's String signature, altough it's not supported natively, I've found how to do it.

It is possible to create a C alternative to performSelector that:

  • works even on native swift classes (non objective-c)
  • takes a selector from string

However it's not so straightforward to implement a complete version of it, and it's necessary to create the method in C.

in C we have dlsym(), a function that returns a pointer to a function given the char symbol. Well, reading this interesting post: http://www.eswick.com/2014/06/inside-swift/ I've learned a lot of interesting things about swift.

Swift instance methods are plain functions with a specific signature, like this

_TFC14FirstSwiftTest12ASampleClass13aTestFunctionfS0_FT_CSo8NSString

where the "self" value is passed as the last parameter

in short you can call it directly from the c side without any kind of bridging, it is sufficient to rebuild the correct function signature. In the signature above, there is the name of the project (FirstSwiftTest) and the lenght (14), the name of the class (ASampleClass) and the lenght (12), the name of the function (aTestFunction) and the lenght (13), then other values as the return type ecc ecc. For other details look at the previous link

The function above, is the representation of this:

class ASampleClass
{
    func aTestFunction() -> NSString
    {
        println("called correctly")
        return NSString(string: "test")
    }

}

Well, on the c side, I was able to create this function

#include <stdio.h>
#include <dlfcn.h>

typedef struct objc_object *id;

id _performMethod(id stringMethod, id onObject)
{
    // ...
    // here the code (to be created) to translate stringMethod in _TFC14FirstSwiftTest12ASampleClass13aTestFunctionfS0_FT_CSo8NSString
    // ...

    id (*functionImplementation)(id);
    *(void **) (&functionImplementation) = dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "_TFC14FirstSwiftTest12ASampleClass13aTestFunctionfS0_FT_CSo8NSString");

    char *error;

    if ((error = dlerror()) != NULL)  {
        printf("Method not found \n");
    } else {
        return functionImplementation(onObject); // <--- call the function
    }
    return NULL
}

And then called it on the swift side

    let sampleClassInstance = ASampleClass()

    println(_performMethod("aTestFunction", sampleClassInstance))

The function resulted in these statement printed on the log:

called correctly
test

So it should be not so difficult to create a _performMethod() alternative in C that:

  • creates automatically the function signature (since it seems to have a logic :-)
  • manages different return value types and parameters

EDIT

In Swift 2 (and maybe in Beta3, I didn't try) It seems that performSelector() is permitted (and you can call it only on NSObject subclasses). Examining the binary, It seems that now Swift creates static functions that can be specifically called by performSelector.

I created this class

class TestClass: NSObject {
    func test() -> Void {
        print("Hello");
    }
}

let test = TestClass()
let aSel : Selector = NSSelectorFromString("test")
test.performSelector(aSel)

and now in the binary I find

000000010026d830 t __TToFC7Perform9TestClass4testfT_T_

At this time, I don't understand well the reasons behind this, but I'll investigate further

1
  • 2
    might want to clarify that the class must inherit from NSObject in order to get the performSelector method available. Commented Jul 20, 2016 at 22:42
8

You could call a method from a String this way:

let foo = <some NSObject subclass instance>
let selectorName = "name"
foo.perform(Selector(selectorName))

It is available only when your foo class is subclass of NSObject

3
  • Yes, now it is possible. At the time of the answer, performSelector was "banned". It seems that now Swift creates a symbol (a static function) for each possible performSelector. I update my answer
    – LombaX
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 8:25
  • perform isn't a keyword. Is this correct or am I misunderstanding something? Commented Jul 20, 2016 at 22:43
  • perform is a method of NSObject (Swift 3) developer.apple.com/reference/objectivec/nsobject/… Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 7:27
5

swift3 version

class MyClass:NSObject
{
    required public  override init() { print("Hi!") }
    
    public func test(){
        print("This is Test")
    }
    public class func static_test(){
        print("This is Static Test")
    }
}


if let c: NSObject.Type = NSClassFromString("TestPerformSelector.MyClass") as? NSObject.Type{
   let c_tmp = c.init()
   c_tmp.perform(Selector("test"))
   c.perform(Selector("static_test"))
}
1
  • It's the project name, the namespace
    – Hari Honor
    Commented Oct 4, 2018 at 14:47

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.