You may be asking, if both haemorrhage and calcium are dark on SWI/GRE how do we know which one it is? On SWI, we can answer this question (sometimes).
When we perform an SWI sequence we acquire several images. One is the magnitude, the second is the phase. These are put together to form the SWI images which are often displayed as minimum intensity projection (mIP).
In short, calcium and haemorrhage cause susceptibility for different reasons and phase will exploit these differences by displaying haemorrhage and calcium as opposite signals i.e. one will be dark and one will be bright. Which is dark is dependent on the machine but a good tip is to compare the signal to something that you know is blood (e.g. the venous sinus).
A caveat to this is that in large lesions it can be difficult to tell as aliasing occurs.