This is partly an issue with the Swift compiler not giving you a helpful error. The real issue is that NSDate
can't be compared with <
directly. Instead, you can use NSDate
's compare
method, like so:
days.sort({ $0.date.compare($1.date) == NSComparisonResult.OrderedAscending })
Alternatively, you could extend NSDate
to implement the Comparable
protocol so that it can be compared with <
(and <=
, >
, >=
, ==
):
public func <(a: NSDate, b: NSDate) -> Bool {
return a.compare(b) == NSComparisonResult.OrderedAscending
}
public func ==(a: NSDate, b: NSDate) -> Bool {
return a.compare(b) == NSComparisonResult.OrderedSame
}
extension NSDate: Comparable { }
Note: You only need to implement <
and ==
and shown above, then rest of the operators <=
, >
, etc. will be provided by the standard library.
With that in place, your original sort function should work just fine:
days.sort({ $0.date < $1.date })
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