Hi, Rien. Libraries don’t support bridging headers because the client of the 
library has to be able to import the header, and arbitrary bridging headers may 
conflict. (This is actually the primary purpose of modules for Objective-C: to 
declare a group of headers that are self-contained—besides what other modules 
they import—and can therefore be imported earlier or later without difficulty.) 
The compiler will mildly try to stop you from doing this if it can figure out 
you’re building a library, but it’s a bad idea no matter what. Even if 
everything appears to compile fine, it’s likely you’ll get inscrutable errors 
when trying te debug anything that uses your library.

The particular difference between Xcode-created frameworks and 
SwiftPM-generated libraries is that Xcode frameworks are set up to be 
mixed-source, using the Objective-C public umbrella header in place of a 
bridging header. SwiftPM doesn’t support mixed-source targets. (Since I don’t 
work on SwiftPM myself I don’t know if there are any public plans to do so.)

The recommended solution is to group your Objective-C headers into modules 
(usually just frameworks) and import them that way, rather than to jam them in 
via a bridging header.

Sorry for the trouble,
Jordan


> On Jan 20, 2017, at 08:49, Rien via swift-users <swift-users@swift.org> wrote:
> 
> I noticed something strange about Xcode and SPM concerning the capability to 
> generate Libraries.
> 
> When I try to create a Library in Xcode and then want to add an Objective-C 
> bridging header, that is denied. It claims that bridging is not supported for 
> Libraries.
> 
> When I create an Xcode project through the SPM (with “swift package 
> generate-xcodeproj”) then I can use bridging headers, even though the end 
> result is a library.
> 
> Question: Is this a viable work around? or are there hidden dangers that 
> might not be immediately apparent?
> 
> As a side note: SPM complains about multiple languages and currently only 
> supports pure Swift modules.
> This creates the strange situation that I now use SPM to create an xcode 
> project and then use Xcode to create bridged mixed language libraries.
> 
> Regards,
> Rien
> 
> Site: http://balancingrock.nl
> Blog: http://swiftrien.blogspot.com
> Github: http://github.com/Swiftrien
> Project: http://swiftfire.nl
> 
> 
> 
> 
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