Rules that require reading someone's mind are not good rules.
Rules that prevent us from improving the site in deference to someone who got his question answered 4+ years ago are also not particularly good rules.
Fortunately, there are no rules that say you can't edit tags if the author wouldn't have added them. Can you imagine if we did? All MySQL questions on Stack Overflow would be tagged php. Tags should always describe the content of the question, and if the author's own tags don't do that then it's our duty to change them.
So let's look at your specific case:
The question isn't about Objective-C; it's about the iOS API, with objective-c added because it's traditional on Stack Overflow to use language tags in sort of a meta sense to request that answers be provided in that language. Since no other languages were encouraged for iOS development back in 2011, of course it would be this one.
The same guy who removed your swift tag also removed the iphone tag and added the ios tag. Now, it's a pretty good bet the asker was actually developing software for the iPhone, so we can dismiss any notions of sacrosanct author intentions right now: ios makes a better tag, and as your adversarial editor realizes, better tagging trumps speculation on author intent any day.
So hopefully, we've put this whole "author intent" thing to rest. We're just left with the question of whether it's appropriate to answer an API question, with a preferred language specified, in an alternate language.
This has been somewhat controversial for years, even on platforms whose owners weren't keeping a choke-hold on the practical availability of languages. I'd imagine that on iOS, a platform only recently blessed with a second supported language, the bright light of choice might be unbearably blinding for some.
So... That's the environment you have to navigate. If more people are offended by seeing a Swift answer than are aided by it, your answer will end up with a negative score. If it turns out Swift coders need to detect bold text too, then you might end up with a positive one. Make the call based on your perception of need, not anyone else's. Or as Anthony Pegram wrote years ago,
Expanding outwards to cover the non-.NET universe, if the answer is indeed in the wrong language and it does not assist in answering the question, that's where we have downvotes. But if the answer helps move the needle, then the language itself is not a problem. It could even be pseudocode, for all we care.
Truth be told, that question doesn't really need either language tag at this point; the question isn't about Swift but isn't any more about Objective-C; if I was searching for an answer to this problem on any of the other platforms where Objective-C can be used, I'd be mighty irritated that this question pops up; frankly, iphone would make a better tag than objective-c at this point.
Related: