How to determine the type of a variable in Swift

You can get a reference to the type object of a value by using the .dynamicType property. This is equivalent to Python’s type() function, and is mentioned in the Swift documentation under Language Reference: Types: Metatype Type.

var intArray = [1, 2, 3]
let typeOfArray = intArray.dynamicType

With this type object, we are able to create a new instance of the same array type.

var newArray = typeOfArray()
newArray.append(5)
newArray.append(6)
println(newArray)
[5, 6]

We can see that this new value is of the same type ([Int]) by attempting to append a float:

newArray.append(1.5)
error: type 'Int' does not conform to protocol 'FloatLiteralConvertible'

If we import Cocoa and use an array literal with mixed types, we can see that an NSArray is created:

import Cocoa

var mixedArray = [1, "2"]
let mixedArrayType = mixedArray.dynamicType

var newArray = mixedArrayType()
var mutableArray = newArray.mutableCopy() as NSMutableArray

mutableArray.addObject(1)
mutableArray.addObject(1.5)
mutableArray.addObject("2")

println(mutableArray)
(1, "1.5", 2)

However, at this point there does not seem to be any general way to generate a string description of a type object, so this may not serve the debugging role that you were asking about.

Types derived from NSObject do have a .description() method, as is used in SiLo’s answer,

println(mixedArrayType.description())
__NSArrayI

However this is not present on types such as Swift’s built-in arrays.

println(typeOfArray.description())
error: '[Int].Type' does not have a member named 'description'

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