When I declare static parameter in extension of class then I have to write @nonobjc before variable like
@nonobjc static let test = \"test\"
a
This is explained in the Apple's official documentation about Objective-C - Swift interoperability:
When you use the @objc(name) attribute on a Swift class, the class is made available in Objective-C without any namespacing. As a result, this attribute can also be useful when migrating an archivable Objective-C class to Swift. Because archived objects store the name of their class in the archive, you should use the @objc(name) attribute to specify the same name as your Objective-C class so that older archives can be unarchived by your new Swift class.
Conversely, Swift also provides the @nonobjc attribute, which makes a Swift declaration unavailable in Objective-C. You can use it to resolve circularity for bridging methods and to allow overloading of methods for classes imported by Objective-C. If an Objective-C method is overridden by a Swift method that cannot be represented in Objective-C, such as by specifying a parameter to be a variable, that method must be marked @nonobjc.
To summarize, use @objc when you want to expose a Swift attribute to Objective-C without a namespace . Use @nonobjc if you want to keep the attribute available and accessible only in Swift code.
(Addendum/additional official details to @bontoJR well summarizing answer)
From the Swift Language Reference - Attributes [emphasis mine]:
objc
Apply this attribute to any declaration that can be represented in Objective-C — for example, non-nested classes, protocols, nongeneric enumerations (constrained to integer raw-value types), properties and methods (including getters and setters) of classes and protocols, initializers, deinitializers, and subscripts. The
objc
attribute tells the compiler that a declaration is available to use in Objective-C code....
nonobjc
Apply this attribute to a method, property, subscript, or initializer declaration to suppress an implicit
objc
attribute. Thenonobjc
attribute tells the compiler to make the declaration unavailable in Objective-C code, even though it is possible to represent it in Objective-C....
Here you can find more details in this Swift Documentation : InteractingWithObjective-C
As an answer of your question, overview from attached link is as below.
@objc : You can use attribute to change the name of a class, property, method, enumeration type, or enumeration case declaration in your interface as it’s exposed to Objective-C code.
Example : if the name of your Swift class contains a character that isn’t supported by Objective-C, you can provide an alternative name to use in Objective-C.
@nonobjc : It makes a swift declaration unavailable in Objective-C. You can use it to resolve circularity for bridging methods and to allow overloading of methods for classes imported by Objective-C.