I want to make a selector argument of my method refer to a closure property, both of them exist in the same scope. For example,
func backgroundChange() {
self.view.backgroundColor = UIColor.blackColor()
self.view.alpha = 0.55
let backToOriginalBackground = {
self.view.backgroundColor = UIColor.whiteColor()
self.view.alpha = 1.0
}
NSTimer.scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval(0.5, target: self, selector: #selector(backToOriginalBackground), userInfo: nil, repeats: false)
}
However, this shows an error: Argument of #selector cannot refer to a property.
Of course I can define a new, separate method and move the implementation of the closure to it, but I want to keep it frugal for such a small implementation.
Is it possible to set a closure to #selector argument?
Not directly, but some workarounds are possible. Take a look at the following example.
/// Target-Action helper.
final class Action: NSObject {
private let _action: () -> ()
init(action: #escaping () -> ()) {
_action = action
super.init()
}
#objc func action() {
_action()
}
}
let action1 = Action { print("action1 triggered") }
let button = UIButton()
button.addTarget(action1, action: #selector(action1.action), forControlEvents: .TouchUpInside)
I tried this for UIBarButtonItem at least:
private var actionKey: Void?
extension UIBarButtonItem {
private var _action: () -> () {
get {
return objc_getAssociatedObject(self, &actionKey) as! () -> ()
}
set {
objc_setAssociatedObject(self, &actionKey, newValue, objc_AssociationPolicy.OBJC_ASSOCIATION_RETAIN_NONATOMIC)
}
}
convenience init(title: String?, style: UIBarButtonItemStyle, action: #escaping () -> ()) {
self.init(title: title, style: style, target: nil, action: #selector(pressed))
self.target = self
self._action = action
}
#objc private func pressed(sender: UIBarButtonItem) {
_action()
}
}
Then you can do this:
navigationItem.leftBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(title: "Test", style: .plain, action: {
print("Hello World!")
})
As #gnasher729 notes, this is not possible because selectors are just names of methods, not methods themselves. In the general case, I'd use dispatch_after here, but in this particular case, the better tool IMO is UIView.animateWithDuration, because it's exactly what that function is for, and it's very easy to tweak the transition:
UIView.animateWithDuration(0, delay: 0.5, options: [], animations: {
self.view.backgroundColor = UIColor.whiteColor()
self.view.alpha = 1.0
}, completion: nil)
It is now possible. I've created a gist for block-based selectors in Swift 4.
https://gist.github.com/cprovatas/98ff940140c8744c4d1f3bcce7ba4543
Usage:
UIButton().addTarget(Selector, action: Selector { debugPrint("my code here") }, for: .touchUpInside)`
You can use ActionClosurable which support UIControl, UIButton, UIRefreshControl, UIGestureRecognizer and UIBarButtonItem.
https://github.com/takasek/ActionClosurable
Bellow show example of UIBarButtonItem
// UIBarButtonItem
let barButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(title: "title", style: .plain) { _ in
print("barButtonItem title")
}
#werediver's answer is excellent. Here's an update that allows you to call it as a function.
import Foundation
public extension Selector {
/// Wraps a closure in a `Selector`.
/// - Note: Callable as a function.
final class Perform: NSObject {
public init(_ perform: #escaping () -> Void) {
self.perform = perform
super.init()
}
private let perform: () -> Void
}
}
//MARK: public
public extension Selector.Perform {
#objc func callAsFunction() { perform() }
var selector: Selector { #selector(callAsFunction) }
}
You need to manage strong references to Selector.Performs. One way to do that is to subclass UIKit classes that were designed to work with target-action:
/// A `UITapGestureRecognizer` that wraps a closure.
public final class TapGestureRecognizer: UITapGestureRecognizer {
public init(_ perform: #escaping () -> Void) {
self.perform = .init(perform)
super.init(target: self.perform, action: self.perform.selector)
}
public let perform: Selector.Perform
}
let tapRecognizer = TapGestureRecognizer { print("🍔🐈") }
tapRecognizer.perform() // "🍔🐈"
No, #selector refers to an Objective-C method.
You can do something much better though: Add an extension to NSTimer that lets you create a scheduled timer not with a target and selector, but with a closure.
If you change the scope of block to a class scope rather than function and hold a reference to closure there.
You could invoke that closure with a function. in the class. So that way you can invoke that closure as a selector.
Something like this:
class Test: NSObject {
let backToOriginalBackground = {
}
func backgroundChange() {
NSTimer.scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval(0.5, target: self, selector: #selector(test), userInfo: nil, repeats: false)
}
func test() {
self.backToOriginalBackground()
}
}
My solution was to create a class block variable like:
let completionBlock: () -> () = nil
Create a method which calls this completionBlock:
func completed(){
self.completionBlock!()
}
And inside where I want to put my selector like a block I did:
func myFunc(){
self.completionBlock = {//what I want to be done}
NSTimer.scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval(0.5, target: self, selector: #selector(Myclass.completed), userInfo: nil, repeats: false)
}
So my answer to having a selector be assigned to a closure in a swift like manner is similar to some of the answers already, but I thought I would share a real life example of how I did it within a UIViewController extension.
fileprivate class BarButtonItem: UIBarButtonItem {
var actionCallback: ( () -> Void )?
func buttonAction() {
actionCallback?()
}
}
fileprivate extension Selector {
static let onBarButtonAction = #selector(BarButtonItem.buttonAction)
}
extension UIViewController {
func createBarButtonItem(title: String, action: #escaping () -> Void ) -> UIBarButtonItem {
let button = BarButtonItem(title: title, style: .plain, target nil, action: nil)
button.actionCallback = action
button.action = .onBarButtonAction
return button
}
}
// Example where button is inside a method of a UIViewController
// and added to the navigationItem of the UINavigationController
let button = createBarButtonItem(title: "Done"){
print("Do something when done")
}
navigationItem.setLeftbarButtonItems([button], animated: false)
Swift 5.2.x
First of all, you need to declare an "easy to use" typealias for your block:
typealias Completion = () -> ()
Then, you must declare private var to use "as a gate" for your function:
private var action: Completion?
After that, you should create a function that can be called by your Selector (it accept only string format) and to call private completion:
#objc func didAction() {
self.action?()
}
Finally you can re-write your function (using the new swift syntax) like:
Timer.scheduledTimer(timeInterval: 0.5, target: self, selector: #selector(didAction), userInfo: nil, repeats: false)
self.action = backToOriginalBackground
P.S.: Remember that your variable (or parameter if you embed it to a function) must be of the same of type declared to your typeAlias so, in our case:
var backToOriginalBackground: () -> ()
or also:
var backToOriginalBackground: Completion
It has been several years since this question was asked, and it is worth noting that in those years, Apple has added variants of many selector-using methods that take closures instead.
The original question asks about NSTimer.scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval. That method is now spelled Timer.scheduledTimer and has a version that takes a closure. So the function in the original question can be rewritten thus:
extension UIViewController {
func changeBackground() {
self.view.backgroundColor = .black
self.view.alpha = 0.55
Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: 0.5, repeats: false) { _ in
self.view.backgroundColor = .white
self.view.alpha = 1.0
}
}
}
Here are some other common cases where, as of May 2016, a selector was required, but which can now use a closure:
UIControl now has an addAction method that takes a UIAction, and UIAction takes a closure. Subclasses of UIControl include UIButton, UISwitch, and UITextField.
UIBarButtonItem has an initializer that takes a UIAction.
NotificationCenter now has an addObserver method that takes a closure. It also supports Combine (the publisher method) and async/await (the notifications method).
RunLoop now has a perform method that takes a closure.
I'm trying to create an NSTimer in Swift but I'm having some trouble.
NSTimer(timeInterval: 1, target: self, selector: test(), userInfo: nil, repeats: true)
test() is a function in the same class.
I get an error in the editor:
Could not find an overload for 'init' that accepts the supplied
arguments
When I change selector: test() to selector: nil the error disappears.
I've tried:
selector: test()
selector: test
selector: Selector(test())
But nothing works and I can't find a solution in the references.
Swift itself doesn't use selectors — several design patterns that in Objective-C make use of selectors work differently in Swift. (For example, use optional chaining on protocol types or is/as tests instead of respondsToSelector:, and use closures wherever you can instead of performSelector: for better type/memory safety.)
But there are still a number of important ObjC-based APIs that use selectors, including timers and the target/action pattern. Swift provides the Selector type for working with these. (Swift automatically uses this in place of ObjC's SEL type.)
In Swift 2.2 (Xcode 7.3) and later (including Swift 3 / Xcode 8 and Swift 4 / Xcode 9):
You can construct a Selector from a Swift function type using the #selector expression.
let timer = Timer(timeInterval: 1, target: object,
selector: #selector(MyClass.test),
userInfo: nil, repeats: false)
button.addTarget(object, action: #selector(MyClass.buttonTapped),
for: .touchUpInside)
view.perform(#selector(UIView.insertSubview(_:aboveSubview:)),
with: button, with: otherButton)
The great thing about this approach? A function reference is checked by the Swift compiler, so you can use the #selector expression only with class/method pairs that actually exist and are eligible for use as selectors (see "Selector availability" below). You're also free to make your function reference only as specific as you need, as per the Swift 2.2+ rules for function-type naming.
(This is actually an improvement over ObjC's #selector() directive, because the compiler's -Wundeclared-selector check verifies only that the named selector exists. The Swift function reference you pass to #selector checks existence, membership in a class, and type signature.)
There are a couple of extra caveats for the function references you pass to the #selector expression:
Multiple functions with the same base name can be differentiated by their parameter labels using the aforementioned syntax for function references (e.g. insertSubview(_:at:) vs insertSubview(_:aboveSubview:)). But if a function has no parameters, the only way to disambiguate it is to use an as cast with the function's type signature (e.g. foo as () -> () vs foo(_:)).
There's a special syntax for property getter/setter pairs in Swift 3.0+. For example, given a var foo: Int, you can use #selector(getter: MyClass.foo) or #selector(setter: MyClass.foo).
General notes:
Cases where #selector doesn't work, and naming: Sometimes you don't have a function reference to make a selector with (for example, with methods dynamically registered in the ObjC runtime). In that case, you can construct a Selector from a string: e.g. Selector("dynamicMethod:") — though you lose the compiler's validity checking. When you do that, you need to follow ObjC naming rules, including colons (:) for each parameter.
Selector availability: The method referenced by the selector must be exposed to the ObjC runtime. In Swift 4, every method exposed to ObjC must have its declaration prefaced with the #objc attribute. (In previous versions you got that attribute for free in some cases, but now you have to explicitly declare it.)
Remember that private symbols aren't exposed to the runtime, too — your method needs to have at least internal visibility.
Key paths: These are related to but not quite the same as selectors. There's a special syntax for these in Swift 3, too: e.g. chris.valueForKeyPath(#keyPath(Person.friends.firstName)). See SE-0062 for details. And even more KeyPath stuff in Swift 4, so make sure you're using the right KeyPath-based API instead of selectors if appropriate.
You can read more about selectors under Interacting with Objective-C APIs in Using Swift with Cocoa and Objective-C.
Note: Before Swift 2.2, Selector conformed to StringLiteralConvertible, so you might find old code where bare strings are passed to APIs that take selectors. You'll want to run "Convert to Current Swift Syntax" in Xcode to get those using #selector.
Here's a quick example on how to use the Selector class on Swift:
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
var rightButton = UIBarButtonItem(title: "Title", style: UIBarButtonItemStyle.Plain, target: self, action: Selector("method"))
self.navigationItem.rightBarButtonItem = rightButton
}
func method() {
// Something cool here
}
Note that if the method passed as a string doesn't work, it will fail at runtime, not compile time, and crash your app. Be careful
Also, if your (Swift) class does not descend from an Objective-C class, then you must have a colon at the end of the target method name string and you must use the #objc property with your target method e.g.
var rightButton = UIBarButtonItem(title: "Title", style: UIBarButtonItemStyle.Plain, target: self, action: Selector("method"))
#objc func method() {
// Something cool here
}
otherwise you will get a "Unrecognised Selector" error at runtime.
Swift 2.2+ and Swift 3 Update
Use the new #selector expression, which eliminates the need to use string literals making usage less error-prone. For reference:
Selector("keyboardDidHide:")
becomes
#selector(keyboardDidHide(_:))
See also: Swift Evolution Proposal
Note (Swift 4.0):
If using #selectoryou would need to mark the function as #objc
Example:
#objc func something(_ sender: UIButton)
Swift 4.0
you create the Selector like below.
1.add the event to a button like:
button.addTarget(self, action: #selector(clickedButton(sender:)), for: UIControlEvents.touchUpInside)
and the function will be like below:
#objc func clickedButton(sender: AnyObject) {
}
For future readers, I found that I experienced a problem and was getting an unrecognised selector sent to instance error that was caused by marking the target func as private.
The func MUST be publicly visible to be called by an object with a reference to a selector.
Just in case somebody else have the same problem I had with NSTimer where none of the other answers fixed the issue, is really important to mention that, if you are using a class that do not inherits from NSObject either directly or deep in the hierarchy(e.g. manually created swift files), none of the other answers will work even when is specified as follows:
let timer = NSTimer(timeInterval: 1, target: self, selector: "test",
userInfo: nil, repeats: false)
func test () {}
Without changing anything else other than just making the class inherit from NSObject I stopped getting the "Unrecognized selector" Error and got my logic working as expected.
If you want to pass a parameter to the function from the NSTimer then here is your solution:
var somethingToPass = "It worked"
let timer = NSTimer.scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval(0.01, target: self, selector: "tester:", userInfo: somethingToPass, repeats: false)
func tester(timer: NSTimer)
{
let theStringToPrint = timer.userInfo as String
println(theStringToPrint)
}
Include the colon in the selector text (tester:), and your parameter(s) go in userInfo.
Your function should take NSTimer as a parameter. Then just extract userInfo to get the parameter that passed.
Selectors are an internal representation of a method name in Objective-C. In Objective-C "#selector(methodName)" would convert a source-code method into a data type of SEL. Since you can't use the #selector syntax in Swift (rickster is on point there), you have to manually specify the method name as a String object directly, or by passing a String object to the Selector type. Here is an example:
var rightBarButton = UIBarButtonItem(
title: "Logout",
style: UIBarButtonItemStyle.Plain,
target: self,
action:"logout"
)
or
var rightBarButton = UIBarButtonItem(
title: "Logout",
style: UIBarButtonItemStyle.Plain,
target: self,
action:Selector("logout")
)
Swift 4.1
With sample of tap gesture
let gestureRecognizer = UITapGestureRecognizer()
self.view.addGestureRecognizer(gestureRecognizer)
gestureRecognizer.addTarget(self, action: #selector(self.dismiss(completion:)))
// Use destination 'Class Name' directly, if you selector (function) is not in same class.
//gestureRecognizer.addTarget(self, action: #selector(DestinationClass.dismiss(completion:)))
#objc func dismiss(completion: (() -> Void)?) {
self.dismiss(animated: true, completion: completion)
}
See Apple's document for more details about: Selector Expression
// for swift 2.2
// version 1
buttton.addTarget(self, action: #selector(ViewController.tappedButton), forControlEvents: .TouchUpInside)
buttton.addTarget(self, action: #selector(ViewController.tappedButton2(_:)), forControlEvents: .TouchUpInside)
// version 2
buttton.addTarget(self, action: #selector(self.tappedButton), forControlEvents: .TouchUpInside)
buttton.addTarget(self, action: #selector(self.tappedButton2(_:)), forControlEvents: .TouchUpInside)
// version 3
buttton.addTarget(self, action: #selector(tappedButton), forControlEvents: .TouchUpInside)
buttton.addTarget(self, action: #selector(tappedButton2(_:)), forControlEvents: .TouchUpInside)
func tappedButton() {
print("tapped")
}
func tappedButton2(sender: UIButton) {
print("tapped 2")
}
// swift 3.x
button.addTarget(self, action: #selector(tappedButton(_:)), for: .touchUpInside)
func tappedButton(_ sender: UIButton) {
// tapped
}
button.addTarget(self, action: #selector(tappedButton(_:_:)), for: .touchUpInside)
func tappedButton(_ sender: UIButton, _ event: UIEvent) {
// tapped
}
Objective-C Selector
Selector identifies a method.
//Compile time
SEL selector = #selector(foo);
//Runtime
SEL selector = NSSelectorFromString(#"foo");
For example
[object sayHello:#"Hello World"];
//sayHello: is a selector
selector is a word from Objective-C world and you are able to use it from Swift to have a possibility to call Objective-C from Swift It allows you to execute some code at runtime
Before Swift 2.2 the syntax is:
Selector("foo:")
Since a function name is passed into Selector as a String parameter("foo") it is not possible to check a name in compile time. As a result you can get a runtime error:
unrecognized selector sent to instance
After Swift 2.2+ the syntax is:
#selector(foo(_:))
Xcode's autocomplete help you to call a right method
Create Refresh control using Selector method.
var refreshCntrl : UIRefreshControl!
refreshCntrl = UIRefreshControl()
refreshCntrl.tintColor = UIColor.whiteColor()
refreshCntrl.attributedTitle = NSAttributedString(string: "Please Wait...")
refreshCntrl.addTarget(self, action:"refreshControlValueChanged", forControlEvents: UIControlEvents.ValueChanged)
atableView.addSubview(refreshCntrl)
//Refresh Control Method
func refreshControlValueChanged(){
atableView.reloadData()
refreshCntrl.endRefreshing()
}
Since Swift 3.0 is published, it is even a little bit more subtle to declare a targetAction appropriate
class MyCustomView : UIView {
func addTapGestureRecognizer() {
// the "_" is important
let tapGestureRecognizer = UITapGestureRecognizer(target: self, action: #selector(MyCustomView.handleTapGesture(_:)))
tapGestureRecognizer.numberOfTapsRequired = 1
addGestureRecognizer(tapGestureRecognizer)
}
// since Swift 3.0 this "_" in the method implementation is very important to
// let the selector understand the targetAction
func handleTapGesture(_ tapGesture : UITapGestureRecognizer) {
if tapGesture.state == .ended {
print("TapGesture detected")
}
}
}
When using performSelector()
/addtarget()/NStimer.scheduledTimerWithInterval() methods your method (matching the selector) should be marked as
#objc
For Swift 2.0:
{
//...
self.performSelector(“performMethod”, withObject: nil , afterDelay: 0.5)
//...
//...
btnHome.addTarget(self, action: “buttonPressed:", forControlEvents: UIControlEvents.TouchUpInside)
//...
//...
NSTimer.scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval(0.5, target: self, selector : “timerMethod”, userInfo: nil, repeats: false)
//...
}
#objc private func performMethod() {
…
}
#objc private func buttonPressed(sender:UIButton){
….
}
#objc private func timerMethod () {
….
}
For Swift 2.2,
you need to write '#selector()' instead of string and selector name so the possibilities of spelling error and crash due to that will not be there anymore. Below is example
self.performSelector(#selector(MyClass.performMethod), withObject: nil , afterDelay: 0.5)
It may be useful to note where you setup the control that triggers the action matters.
For example, I have found that when setting up a UIBarButtonItem, I had to create the button within viewDidLoad or else I would get an unrecognized selector exception.
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
// add button
let addButton = UIBarButtonItem(image: UIImage(named: "746-plus-circle.png"), style: UIBarButtonItemStyle.Plain, target: self, action: Selector("addAction:"))
self.navigationItem.rightBarButtonItem = addButton
}
func addAction(send: AnyObject?) {
NSLog("addAction")
}
you create the Selector like below.
1.
UIBarButtonItem(
title: "Some Title",
style: UIBarButtonItemStyle.Done,
target: self,
action: "flatButtonPressed"
)
2.
flatButton.addTarget(self, action: "flatButtonPressed:", forControlEvents: UIControlEvents.TouchUpInside)
Take note that the #selector syntax is gone and replaced with a simple String naming the method to call. There’s one area where we can all agree the verbosity got in the way. Of course, if we declared that there is a target method called flatButtonPressed: we better write one:
func flatButtonPressed(sender: AnyObject) {
NSLog("flatButtonPressed")
}
set the timer:
var timer = NSTimer.scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval(1.0,
target: self,
selector: Selector("flatButtonPressed"),
userInfo: userInfo,
repeats: true)
let mainLoop = NSRunLoop.mainRunLoop() //1
mainLoop.addTimer(timer, forMode: NSDefaultRunLoopMode) //2 this two line is optinal
In order to be complete, here’s the flatButtonPressed
func flatButtonPressed(timer: NSTimer) {
}
I found many of these answers to be helpful but it wasn't clear how to do this with something that wasn't a button. I was adding a gesture recognizer to a UILabel in swift and struggled so here's what I found worked for me after reading everything above:
let tapRecognizer = UITapGestureRecognizer(
target: self,
action: "labelTapped:")
Where the "Selector" was declared as:
func labelTapped(sender: UILabel) { }
Note that it is public and that I am not using the Selector() syntax but it is possible to do this as well.
let tapRecognizer = UITapGestureRecognizer(
target: self,
action: Selector("labelTapped:"))
Using #selector will check your code at compile time to make sure the method you want to call actually exists. Even better, if the method doesn’t exist, you’ll get a compile error: Xcode will refuse to build your app, thus banishing to oblivion another possible source of bugs.
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
navigationItem.rightBarButtonItem =
UIBarButtonItem(barButtonSystemItem: .Add, target: self,
action: #selector(addNewFireflyRefernce))
}
func addNewFireflyReference() {
gratuitousReferences.append("Curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal!")
}
As many have stated selectors are an objective c way of dynamically calling methods that has been carried over to Swift, it some case we are still stuck with it, like UIKit, probable because they where working on SwiftUI to replace it but some api have more swift like version like Swift Timer, for example you can use
class func scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval interval: TimeInterval,
repeats: Bool,
block: #escaping (Timer) -> Void) -> Timer
Instead, you can then call it like
Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: 1,
repeats: true ) {
... your test code here
}
or
Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: 1,
repeats: true,
block: test)
where the method test takes a Timer argument, or if you want test to take an named argument
Timer.scheduledTimer(withTimeInterval: 1,
repeats: true,
block: test(timer:))
you should also be using Timer not NSTimer as NSTimer is the old objective-c name
Change as a simple string naming in the method calling for selector syntax
var timer1 : NSTimer? = nil
timer1= NSTimer(timeInterval: 0.1, target: self, selector: Selector("test"), userInfo: nil, repeats: true)
After that, type func test().
For Swift 3
//Sample code to create timer
Timer.scheduledTimer(timeInterval: 1, target: self, selector: (#selector(updateTimer)), userInfo: nil, repeats: true)
WHERE
timeInterval:- Interval in which timer should fire like 1s, 10s, 100s etc. [Its value is in secs]
target:- function which pointed to class. So here I am pointing to current class.
selector:- function that will execute when timer fires.
func updateTimer(){
//Implemetation
}
repeats:- true/false specifies that timer should call again n again.
Selector in Swift 4:
button.addTarget(self, action: #selector(buttonTapped(sender:)), for: UIControlEvents.touchUpInside)
For swift 3
let timer = Timer.scheduledTimer(timeInterval: 0.01, target: self, selector: #selector(self.test), userInfo: nil, repeats: true)
Function declaration In same class:
#objc func test()
{
// my function
}