Class-Only Protocols in Swift
Swift 4 allows you to combine types, so you can have your protocol and then create, for example, a type alias to combine it with a specific class requirement.
For (a contrived) example:
typealias PresentableVC = UIViewController & Presentable
For the presented code:
The problem is that you're trying to limit to specific classes and Swift can't do that (at the moment anyway). You can only limit to classes and inherit from other protocols. Your syntax is for protocol inheritance but you're trying to use it as a class limitation.
Note that the purpose of class protocols is:
Use a class-only protocol when the behavior defined by that protocol’s requirements assumes or requires that a conforming type has reference semantics rather than value semantics.
The answers provided by Chris and Wain are correct. I'm just adding a few more details here.
Defining a protocol
You must distinguish the concept of declaring a protocol
(available for classes)
protocol RefreshData: class {
func updateController()
}
Defining a class
...from the concept of conforming your class to a protocol
class ClassA: RefreshData {
func updateController() {
}
}
Conforming a class you don't own
Sometimes you want to conform a class to a protocol but you don't own the source code for that class. In this case you can use an extension
extension ClassB: RefreshData {
func updateController() {
}
}
Latest version of Swift can do it! I would do a protocol and protocol extensions that target the classes you want! (constraint the extension to specific class)
protocol Movable {
func moveForward()
func moveBackward()
}
extension Movable where Self: Car {
func moveForward() {
self.location.x += 10;
}
func moveBackward() {
self.location.x -= 10;
}
}
extension Movable where Self: Bike {
func moveForward() {
self.x += 1;
}
func moveBackward() {
self.x -= 1;
}
}
class Car: Movable {
var location: CGPoint
init(atLocation location: CGPoint) {
self.location = location
}
}
class Bike: Movable {
var x: Int
init(atX x: Int) {
self.x = x
}
}