i used to say in obj-c
[self.tabBarController.viewControllers objectAtIndex:1];
but now in swift no ObjectAtIndex any more
self.tabBarController.viewControllers.ObjectAtIndex
Update
ok i am gonna make it simple lets consider i have tabBarController it contains 2 object [FirstViewController,SecondViewController] and i am trying to make a delegate between the object here is the code to set the delegate
var Svc:SecondViewController = self.tabBarController.viewControllers[1] as SecondViewController!
Svc.delegate = self
when i Run , i got this error 0x1064de80d: movq %r14, %rax and no console error is showing up
Your code is OK:
var svc:SecondViewController = self.tabBarController.viewControllers[1] as SecondViewController!
svc.delegate = self
... however you can omit !
mark at the end and :SecondViewController
type definition since it can be inferred by the cast:
var svc = self.tabBarController.viewControllers[1] as SecondViewController
The problem appears because you try to cast to the wrong class.
Try to print to debug log name of the class of object at [1]
; add this before your cast to check the class name:
let vcTypeName = NSStringFromClass(self.tabBarController.viewControllers[1].classForCoder)
println("\(vcTypeName)")
UPDATE:
As we figured out in comments, you should cast received view controller to UINavigationController
:
var nc = self.tabBarController.viewControllers[1] as UINavigationController
Later you can examine nc.viewControllers
property and see if for instance its topViewController
is SecondViewController
:
if nc.topViewController is SecondViewController {
var svc = nc.topViewController as SecondViewController
// your code goes here
}
You don't need objectAtIndex
in swift, just use the subscript
operator:
self.tabBarController.viewControllers[1]
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