How can I get the memory address of a value type or a custom struct in Swift?

According to Martin R' s answer

addressOf() cannot be used with struct variables. String is a struct, however, it is automatically bridged to NSString when passed to a function expecting an object.

According to nschum's answer, you can get the (stack) address of a struct, build-in type or object reference like this:

import UIKit


func address(o: UnsafePointer<Void>) -> Int {
    return unsafeBitCast(o, Int.self)
}

func addressHeap<T: AnyObject>(o: T) -> Int {
    return unsafeBitCast(o, Int.self)
}


struct myStruct {
    var a: Int
}

class myClas {

}
//struct
var struct1 = myStruct(a: 5)
var struct2 = struct1
print(NSString(format: "%p", address(&struct1))) // -> "0x10f1fd430\n"
print(NSString(format: "%p", address(&struct2))) // -> "0x10f1fd438\n"

//String
var s = "A String"
var aa = s
print(NSString(format: "%p", address(&s))) // -> "0x10f43a430\n"
print(NSString(format: "%p", address(&aa))) // -> "0x10f43a448\n"

//Class
var class1 = myClas()
var class2 = class1
print(NSString(format: "%p", addressHeap(class1))) // -> 0x7fd5c8700970
print(NSString(format: "%p", addressHeap(class2))) // -> 0x7fd5c8700970

unsafeAddressOf(class1) //"UnsafePointer(0x7FD95AE272E0)"
unsafeAddressOf(class2) //"UnsafePointer(0x7FD95AE272E0)"

//Int
var num1 = 55
var num2 = num1
print(NSString(format: "%p", address(&num1))) // -> "0x10f1fd480\n"
print(NSString(format: "%p", address(&num2))) // -> "0x10f1fd488\n"

One thing I found is, if myStruct has no value, the address will be retain same:

struct myStruct {

}

var struct1 = myStruct()
var struct2 = struct1
print(NSString(format: "%p", address(&struct1))) // -> ""0xa000000000070252\n""
print(NSString(format: "%p", address(&struct2))) // -> ""0xa000000000070252\n""

Swift 2.0 :

You can use this unsafeAddressOf(someObject)

or in Swift 3.0:

use withUnsafePointer(to: someObejct) { print("\($0)") }