I am extending a base class (one which I do not control) in Swift. I want to provide a class function for creating an instance typed to a subclass. A generic function is required. However, an implementation like the one below does not return the expected subclass type.
class Calculator {
func showKind() { println("regular") }
}
class ScientificCalculator: Calculator {
let model: String = "HP-15C"
override func showKind() { println("scientific") }
}
extension Calculator {
class func create<T:Calculator>() -> T {
let instance = T()
return instance
}
}
let sci: ScientificCalculator = ScientificCalculator.create()
sci.showKind()
The debugger reports T
as ScientificCalculator
, but sci
is Calculator
and calling sci.showKind()
returns "regular".
Is there a way to achieve the desired result using generics, or is it a bug?
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