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I am trying to write a function that loads a particular view controller from my array of string>. However I'm struggling with this concept in swift - I achieved this in Objective - C.

static NSString const *const viewControllerClassName[3] = {@"one", @"two", @"three"};

.

// get the name of the class of the viewcontroller that will be shown on this page
const NSString *className = viewControllerClassName[1];
Class class = NSClassFromString((NSString *)className);

UIViewController *controller = [[class alloc] initWithContainer:self];

How do I achieve this concept in Swift? As Class is not featured in Swift?

3 Answers 3

2

For NSObject derived classes (e.g. for view controller classes), NSClassFromString() still works in Swift (see also the various answers to Swift language NSClassFromString).

I have added a conditional cast on the type to ensure that the created class is indeed a subclass of UIViewController. As a consequence, the compiler "knows" about the available init methods, and that the created instance is a UIViewController.

let viewControllerClassName = [ "one", "two", "three"]

let className = viewControllerClassName[1]
if let theClass = NSClassFromString(className) as? UIViewController.Type {
    let controller = theClass(nibName: nil, bundle: nil)
    // ...
}

Update for Swift 3:

if let theClass = NSClassFromString(className) as? UIViewController.Type {
    let controller = theClass.init(nibName: nil, bundle: nil)
    // ...
}
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Swift currently doesn't do much in the direction of reflection and metaprogramming. You'll have to resolve to using Objective-C to do this. You might want to have a look at Josh Smiths Swift Factory: http://ijoshsmith.com/2014/06/05/instantiating-classes-by-name-in-swift/

-1

What you are trying to do is against type-safety. Swift is a type safe language and does not allow you to do that. It might be possible with using some ObjC runtime functions, but it is probably not the best way. If you really need this kind of stuff, use Swift and Objective-C together on the same project.

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