EDIT: The previous answers alluded to in the comments don't answer the question, which was how to determine if any given Type was a reference type and how to safely conform said type to AnyObject.
Testing against the passed type doesn't work, as the underlying type could be optional, or it could be a protocol, in which case one needs to know the passed instance is a class type or value type.
The solution I came up with is similar to the revised answer provided below.
So I have a new dependency injection framework, Factory.
Factory allows for scoped instances, basically allowing you to cache services once they're created. And one of those scopes is shared. Any instance shared will be cached and returned just as long as someone in the outside world maintains a strong reference to it. After the last reference releases the object the cache releases the object and a new instance will be created on the next resolution.
This is implemented, obviously, as simply maintaining a weak reference to the created object. If the weak reference is nil it's time to create a new object.
And therein lies the problem
Weak references can only apply to reference types.
Factory uses generics internally to manage type information. But I can create Factories of any type: Classes, structs, strings, whatever.)
Scopes use dictionaries of boxed types internally. If an instance exists in the cache and in the box it's returned. So what I'd like to do is create this...
private struct WeakBox<T:AnyObject>: AnyBox {
weak var boxed: T
}
The AnyObject conformance is need in order to allow weak. You get a compiler error otherwise. Now I want to box and cache an object in my shared scope with something like this...
func cache<T>(id: Int, instance: T) {
cache[id] = WeakBox(boxed: instance)
}
But this also gives a compiler error. (Generic struct WeakBox requires T to be a class type.)
So how to bridge from on to the other? Doing the following doesn't work. Swift shows a warning that "Conditional cast from 'T' to 'AnyObject' always succeeds" and then converts the type anyway.
func cache<T>(id: Int, instance: T) {
if let instance = instance as? AnyObject {
cache[id] = WeakBox(boxed: instance)
}
}
I'd be happy with the following, but again, same problem. You can't test for class conformance and you can't conditionally cast to AnyObject. Again, it always succeeds.
private struct WeakBox: AnyBox {
weak var boxed: AnyObject?
}
func cache<T>(id: Int, instance: T) {
if let instance = instance as? AnyObject {
cache[id] = WeakBox(boxed: instance)
}
}
What I'm doing at the moment is something like...
private struct WeakBox: AnyBox {
weak var boxed: AnyObject?
}
func cache<T>(id: Int, instance: T) {
cache[id] = WeakBox(boxed: instance as AnyObject)
}
Which works, but that instance as AnyObject
cast depends on some very weird Swift to Objective-C bridging behavior.
Not being able to test for class conformance at runtime is driving me bonkers, and seems like a semi-major loophole in the language.
You can't test for conformance, and you can't cast for conformance.
So what can you do?
As Martin notes in a comment, any value can be cast to AnyObject
in Swift, because Swift will wrap value types in an opaque _SwiftValue
class, and the cast will always succeed. There is a way around this, though.
The way to check whether a value is a reference type without this implicit casting is to check whether its type is AnyObject.Type
, like so:
func printIsObject(_ value: Any) {
if type(of: value) is AnyObject.Type {
print("Object")
} else {
print("Other")
}
}
class Foo {}
struct Bar {}
enum Quux { case q }
printIsObject(Foo()) // => Object
printIsObject(Bar()) // => Other
printIsObject(Quux.q) // => Other
Note that it's crucial that you check whether the type is AnyObject.Type
not is AnyObject
. T.self
, the object representing the type of the value, is itself an object, so is AnyObject
will always succeed. Instead, is AnyObject.Type
asks "does this inherit from the metatype of all objects", i.e., "does this object which represents a type inherit from an object that represents all object types?"
Edit: Evidently, I'd forgotten that Swift includes AnyClass
as a synonym for AnyObject.Type
, so the check can be simplified to be is AnyClass
. However, leaving the above as a marginally-expanded explanation for how this works.
If you want this method to also be able to handle Optional
values, you're going to have to do a bit of special-casing to add support. Specifically, because Optional<T>
is an enum
regardless of the type of T
, you're going to need to reach in to figure out what T
is.
There are a few ways to do this, but because Optional
is a generic type, and it's not possible to ask "is this value an Optional<T>
?" without knowing what T
is up-front, one of the easier and more robust ways to do this is to introduce a protocol which Optional
adopts that erases the type of the underlying value while still giving you access to it:
protocol OptionalProto {
var wrappedValue: Any? { get }
}
extension Optional: OptionalProto {
var wrappedValue: Any? {
switch self {
case .none: return nil
case let .some(value):
// Recursively reach in to grab nested optionals as needed.
if let innerOptional = value as? OptionalProto {
return innerOptional.wrappedValue
} else {
return value
}
}
}
}
We can then use this protocol to our advantage in cache
:
func cache(id: Int, instance: Any) {
if let opt = instance as? OptionalProto {
if let wrappedValue = opt.wrappedValue {
cache(id: id, instance: wrappedValue)
}
return
}
// In production:
// cache[id] = WeakBox(boxed: instance as AnyObject)
if type(of: instance) is AnyClass {
print("\(type(of: instance)) is AnyClass")
} else {
print("\(type(of: instance)) is something else")
}
}
This approach handles all of the previous cases, but also infinitely-deeply-nested Optional
s, and protocol types inside of Optional
s:
class Foo {}
struct Bar {}
enum Quux { case q }
cache(id: 1, instance: Foo()) // => Foo is AnyClass
cache(id: 2, instance: Bar()) // => Bar is something else
cache(id: 3, instance: Quux.q) // => Quux is something else
let f: Optional<Foo> = Foo()
cache(id: 4, instance: f) // => Foo is AnyClass
protocol SomeProto {}
extension Foo: SomeProto {}
let p: Optional<SomeProto> = Foo()
cache(id: 5, instance: p) // => Foo is AnyClass