EDIT: Ah, I did not understand your question. Swift is not written in Swift, so you cannot necessarily define a func in the same way. From the documentation...
The values passed to a variadic parameter are made available within
the function’s body as an array of the appropriate type.
If you do pass an array to print, you get the same effect as you are seeing with a Swift func. i.e.
print(1, 2, 3) - prints 1 2 3
print([1, 2, 3]) - prints [1, 2, 3]
Furthermore, the following prints "Array<Any>".
func printIt(_ args: Any...) {
print(type(of: args))
}
Since in Swift the only choice for defining the func with variable arguments is "...", I take it to mean you cannot define a func in the same manner as print. Therefore your only choice if you need the same result is to simulate it by converting the array to a string, joined with spaces. Is your question theoretical or do you have a particular objective?
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I'm not sure I understand your question, as the following works:
func printIt(args: Any...) {
print(args)
}
printIt(args: 1, 2, 3)
Alternatively, if you don't want to pass the parameter name:
func printIt(_ args: Any...) {
print(args)
}
printIt(1, 2, 3)