Cannot subclass a class with objc_subclassing_restricted attribute

Thanks. I'll file a bug with our documentation team to try to clarify that.

-Joe

···

On Apr 17, 2017, at 10:11 PM, Rick Mann <rmann@latencyzero.com> wrote:

On Apr 17, 2017, at 08:54 , Joe Groff <jgroff@apple.com> wrote:

On Apr 14, 2017, at 7:41 PM, Rick Mann via swift-users <swift-users@swift.org> wrote:

I'm refactoring some Objective-C code to inherit from a new Swift super class. This has been going okay, and I've been cleaning up build errors as I spot them (some auxiliary enums caused enum name changes, etc.).

But my last error seems to be that I can't subclass the Swift class: "Cannot subclass a class with objc_subclassing_restricted attribute". I didn't notice it before, and all the online references that say you can't subclass a Swift class point to a Swift document that no longer mentions that. They also don't say what they mean by "Swift" class (e.g. is it not marked with @objc?).

In any case, my Swift class looks like:

@objc
class
Camera : NSObject
{
...
}

And my ObjC class looks like:

@interface
MCPCamera : Camera

...

@end

I feel like this is a reasonable thing to try to do. Is it just not possible?

Subclassing Swift classes from Objective-C is not supported. If the documentation no longer mentions that restriction, we should fix that. Where is that document that you're referring to?

This is one document that doesn't clearly state it:

  Swift | Apple Developer Documentation

It has nice sections like "Using Swift from Objective-C," and "Declaring a Swift Protocol That Can Be Adopted by an Objective-C Class," and "Adopting a Swift Protocol in an Objective-C Implementation," but no "Inheriting a Swift Class in Objective-C" (the discussion in such a section should explain that it can't be done and why). Searching the document for "derive", "inherit", "subclass" doesn't turn up any indication this can't be done.

Given that you can do all the other things, and there's such a thing as marking a Swift class as @objc, and you can subclass in Swift, it's quite unintuitive that you cannot go the other way.