All this to say, it is hard to answer this question in one comment, but to try to sum up my position on this, I believe the performance benefits of Swift were and remain overblown. It’s a micro benchmark based approach, which as we’ll see in a second is particularly misguided for Swift's theoretically intended use case as an app language. I think increasingly people agree with this as they haven't really found Swift to deliver on some amazing performance that wouldn’t have been possible in Objective-C. This is for a number of reasons:
1. As mentioned above, the most important flaw with a performance based Swift argument is that the vast majority of the stack is still written in Objective-C/C/etc.. So even if Swift was dramatically better, it’s only usually affecting your app’s code. Oftentimes the vast majority of the time is spent in framework code. Think of it this way: pretend that all of iOS and UIKit were written in JavaScript, but then in order to “improve performance” you write your app code in C. Would it be faster? I guess, but you can imagine why it may not actually end up having that much of an effect. This was ironically the bizarre position we found ourselves in with Swift: your app code was in a super strict typed language, but the underlying frameworks were written in a loosey-goosey dynamic language. This is exact opposite of how you'd want to design a stack. Just look at games, where performance is often the absolute top priority: the actual game engine is usually written in something like C++, but then the game logic is often written in a scripting language like Lua. Swift iOS apps are the reverse of this. Now, I'm sure someone will argue that the real goal is for the entire stack to eventually be in Swift, at which point this won't be an issue anymore, but now we're talking about a 20-year plan, where it seems weird to prioritize my Calculator app's code as the critical first step.
2. As it turns out, Objective-C was already really fast! Especially since, due to its ability to trivially interface with C and C++, a lot of existing apps in the wild had already probably topped out on performance. This wasn't like you were taking an install base of python apps and getting them all to move over to C. This was an already low-level language, where many of the developers were already comfortable with the "performance kings" of the C-family of languages. Languages, which, for the record, have decades of really really good tooling specifically to make things performant, and decades of engineering experience by their users to make things performant. And so, in practice, for existing apps, this often felt more like a lateral move. I actually remember feeling confused when after the announcement of Swift people started talking about Objective-C as if it was some slow language or something. Like, literally the year before, Objective-C was considered the low-level performance beast compared to, say, Android's use of Java. Objective-C just wasn't that that slow of a comparison point to improve that much on. The two languages even share the same memory management model (something that ends up having a big affect on its performance characteristics). Dynamic dispatch (objc_msgSend) just does not really end up really dominating your performance graph when you profile your app.
3. But perhaps most importantly, I think there is a mirror misguided focus on language over frameworks as with the developer ergonomics issues I pointed out above. If you look at where the actual performance gains have come from in apps, I’d argue that it’s overwhelmingly been from conceptual framework improvements, not tiny language wins. A great example of this is CoreAnimation. Making hardware accelerated graphics accessible through a nice declarative API, such that we can move as much animation off the CPU and onto the GPU as possible, is one of the key reasons everything feels so great on iOS. I promise no language change will make anywhere near as big of a dent as Apple's investment in CoreAnimation did. I’d argue that if we had invested development time in, e.g., async/await in Objective-C, rather than basically delaying that work for a decade in Swift, we’d very possibly be in a much more performant world today.
Anyways, these are just a few of thoughts on the performance-side of things. Unfortunately, as time moves on, now a decade into this transition, while I find more people agreeing with me than, say, when Swift was first announced, it also becomes more academic since it's not like Apple is going to go back and try to make Objective-C 3 or something now. That being said, I do think it is still useful to look back and analyze these decisions, to avoid making similar mistakes in the future. I think the Python 2 to 3 transition provided an important lesson to other languages, I hope someday we look at the Swift introduction as a similar cautionary tale of programming language design and community/ecosystem stewardship and management.
1. https://forums.swift.org/t/standard-vapor-website-drops-1-5-...