I want to use my class as a property in my project. The idea is that i have a class which contains all list ellements. The basic idea i show below in graph:
So i have a myContainerClass object, and i want to do in some other class:
#property (strong,nonatomic) MyContainerClass *obj;
and here i have error! I figure out that i can only use Foundations type as a #property. But Why? What is replacement for doing that (passing an object)?
No, you can use any class you like as a property
#property (nonatomic, strong) MyContainerClass* obj;
is perfectly legal provided that the compiler knows that MyContainerClass is a class. To do that in the header file, the best way is to use an #class forward declaration:
#class MyContainerClass;
#interface SomeOtherClass : NSObject
// method an property declarations
#property (nonatomic, strong) MyContainerClass* obj;
#end
And then include the header file in the implementation:
#import "MyContainerClass.h"
#implementation SomeOtherClass
#synthesize obj;
// other stuff
#end
What is the error you are getting? May be you are not importing MyContainerClass to where you want to use it.
#import "MyContainerClass.h"
Declare a category for an object that you want to add your property to:
#interface NSObject (MyContainerClassAdditions)
#property (nonatomic, strong) MyContainerClass *myContainerClass
#end
Then implement the setter and getter methods using objective c associated object trick:
#import <objc/runtime.h>
#implementation NSObject (MyContainerClassAdditions)
- (void)setMyContainerClass:(MyContainerClass *)myContainerClass {
objc_setAssociatedObject(self, "myContainerClass", myContainerClass, OBJC_ASSOCIATION_ASSIGN);
}
- (MyContainerClass *)myContainerClass {
return objc_getAssociatedObject(self, "myContainerClass");
}
#end
Related
I'm learning the objective C language and i ask a simple question,
when i do that :
// ParentClass.h
#interface ParentClass : NSObject
#property (read, strong) NSString *parentPublicStr;
#end
// ParentClass.m
#interface ParentClass ()
#property (readwrite, strong) NSString *parentPrivateStr;
#end
#implementation ParentClass
#synthesize parentPublicStr;
#synthesize parentPrivateStr;
#end
// Subclass SubClass.h
#interface SubClass : ParentClass
- (void) test;
#end
#implementation SubClass
- (void) test
{
// Its not possible to do that : [self setParentPrivateStr:#"myStrin"]
// And for parentPublicStr, it is public property so not protected, because i can change the value
// in main.c, and it's so bad..
}
#end
I would like create a property that is protected :x
Thx you. (Sorry for my english)
Objective-C does not provide for protected methods/properties. See this question.
Edit: Also see this answer. You can still practice encapsulation by declaring the property in a class extension and including the extension in subclasses.
You can manually create an ivar for the property as long as you use the same name prefixed with an underscore:
#interface ParentClass : NSObject
{
#protected
NSString* _parentPublicStr;
}
#property (read, strong) NSString *parentPublicStr;
#end
That makes the synthesized ivar for the property #protected (default is #private) and subclasses can then use the super class' ivar directly.
In the superclass MyClass:
#interface MyClass : NSObject
#property (nonatomic, strong, readonly) NSString *pString;
#end
#implementation MyClass
#synthesize pString = _pString;
#end
In the subclass MySubclass
#interface MySubclass : MyClass
#end
#implementation MySubclass
- (id)init {
if (self = [super init]) {
_pString = #"Some string";
}
return self;
}
The problem is that the compiler doesn't think that _pString is a member of MySubclass, but I have no problem accessing it in MyClass.
What am I missing?
The instance variable _pString produced by #synthesize is private to MyClass. You need to make it protected in order for MySubclass to be able to access it.
Add an ivar declaration for _pString in the #protected section of MyClass, like this:
#interface MyClass : NSObject {
#protected
NSString *_pString;
}
#property (nonatomic, strong, readonly) NSString *pString;
#end
Now synthesize the accessors as usual, and your variable will become accessible to your subclass.
I am familiar with this problem. You synthesize the variable in your .m class, so it is not imported along with the header since the _pString variable will be created as part of the implementation, and not the interface. The solution is to declare _pString in your header interface and then synthesize it anyway (it will use the existing variable instead of creating a private one).
#interface MyClass : NSObject
{
NSString *_pString; //Don't worry, it will not be public
}
#property (nonatomic, strong, readonly) NSString *pString;
#end
The given answer works perfectly fine. This is an alternative answer, that apparently Apple likes a bit more.
You can define a private extension of your class, a MyClass+Protected.h file, which needs to be included in MyClass.m and MySubclass.m.
Then, in this new file, you redefine the property as readwrite.
#interface MyClass ()
#property (strong, readwrite) NSString * pString;
#end
This alternative allows you to use the accessor self.pString rather than the ivar _pString.
Note: you still need to keep the definition of pString in your MyClass.h as is.
If I have this class defined, how do I access the someObject property in subclasses without compiler errors?
#interface MyBaseClass
// someObject property not declared here because I want it to be scoped
// protected. Only this class instance and subclass instances should be
// able to see the someObject property.
#end
// This is a private interface extension...properties declared here
// won't be visible to subclasses. However, I don't see any way to
// declare protected properties...
#interface MyBaseClass (private)
#property (nonatomic, readwrite, retain) NSObject *someObject;
#end
#interface MySubclass : MyBaseClass
#end
#implementation MySubclass
- (id) init {
// Try to do something with the super classes' someObject property.
// Always throws compile errors.
// Semantic Issue: Property 'someObject' not found
// object of type 'MySubclass *'
self.someObject = nil;
}
#end
I'm obviously not understanding how inheritance works in objective-c. Could someone enlighten me?
The solution you're after is to declare the MyBaseClass private property in a class extension:
#interface MyBaseClass ()
#property (nonatomic, readwrite, retain) NSObject *someObject;
#end
You are then free to make that declaration both in MyBaseClass and in MySubclass. This lets MySubclass know about these properties so that its code can talk about them.
If the repetition bothers you, put the class extension in a .h file of its own and import it into both .m files.
I will give an example from my own code. Here is MyDownloaderPrivateProperties.h:
#interface MyDownloader ()
#property (nonatomic, strong, readwrite) NSURLConnection* connection;
#property (nonatomic, copy, readwrite) NSURLRequest* request;
#property (nonatomic, strong, readwrite) NSMutableData* mutableReceivedData;
#end
There is no corresponding .m file and that's all that's in this file; it is, as it were, purely declarative. Now here's the start of MyDownloader.m:
#import "MyDownloader.h"
#import "MyDownloaderPrivateProperties.h"
#implementation MyDownloader
#synthesize connection=_connection;
#synthesize request=_request;
#synthesize mutableReceivedData=_mutableReceivedData;
// ...
And here's the start of its subclass MyImageDownloader.m:
#import "MyImageDownloader.h"
#import "MyDownloaderPrivateProperties.h"
Problem solved. Privacy is preserved, as these are the only classes that import MyDownloaderPrivateProperties.h so they are the only classes that know about these properties as far as the compiler is concerned (and that's all that privacy is in Objective-C). The subclass can access the private properties whose accessors are synthesized by the superclass. I believe that's what you wanted to accomplish in the first place.
that's how you access them. how you declare them is what's biting you:
#interface MyBaseClass : NSObject
#property (nonatomic, readwrite, retain) NSObject *someObject;
#end
this is the normal way to declare a new objc class.
by adding the parentheses (instead of declaring the superclass - NSObject in this case), you have declared a class extension, which is probably not visible to the subclass (via inclusion).
you will probably never need to declare a root class in objc:
#interface MyBaseClass // << superclass omitted
#property (nonatomic, readwrite, retain) NSObject *someObject;
#end
NSObject (or a subclass of, assuming you're target apple's systems) should be the base class unless you're very experienced and know what a root class is for.
class extensions are often used to 'simulate' private interfaces. by simulate, the compiler doesn't enforce this, as it would be enforced in other languages. for example, all messages are still dynamic, although the subclass may (unknowingly) override methods in your extensions, if declared with the same selector.
Judging by the () after your base class name, it looks like you are declaring a private interface extension within your class implementation, is this the case? If so the variable will only be accessible from within that class implementation.
Does your MyBaseClass inherits from NSObject directly?
If so, you need to declare the someObject property in your interface file, as in:
#interface MyBaseClass : NSObject
{
}
#property (nonatomic, retain) NSObject *someObject;
And then synthesize it like you are already doing.
This is an alternative that meets most of the objectives.
In your header, define the interface
#interface MyBaseClass : NSObject {
NSObject *inheritableObject;
}
#property (readonly) NSObject *inheritableObject;
Now you can edit the inheritableObject in MyBaseClass as well as in any Class that inherits from MyBaseClass. However, from the outside, it is readonly. Not private as in the case of #interface MyBaseClass(), but protected from uncontrolled changes.
super.someObject = nil;. Inheritance means MyBaseClass is your super class.
If you synthesize a custom class, do getters and setters get created for it?
This is the custom class I created.
// MyClass.h
#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>
#interface MyClass : NSObject <NSCoding> {
NSString *string1;
NSString *string2;
}
#property (nonatomic, retain) NSString *string1;
#property (nonatomic, retain) NSString *string2;
#end
Here I declare an object of that class as a property
// DetailViewController.h
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
#import "MyClass.h"
#interface DetailViewController : UIViewController {
MyClass *myObject;
}
#property(nonatomic, retain) MyClass *myObject;
#end
Here I synthesize the object.
#import "DetailViewController.h"
#import "MyClass.h"
#implementation DetailViewController
#synthesize myObject;
So does it have getters and setters?
When I try to run this code inside RootViewController.m
DetailViewController.myObject = [theArray objectAtIndex:indexPath.row];
I get an error saying "Accessing unkown 'setMyObject:' class method. Object cannot be set - either readonly property or no setter found.'
Only if you declare the desired instance variables as properties, then synthesize propname;, will getters and setters be created. Now, what kind of code goes into the getters and setters depends on what property attributes you define (nonatomic/atomic, assign, retain, copy)
EDIT to OP's revised question: Yes a getter/setter will be created for the myObject instance variable of the DetailViewController class
DetailViewController.myObject = [theArray objectAtIndex:indexPath.row];
You are attempting to set a class variable that isn't defined. DetailViewController is of type Class, not DetailViewController. Perform the same operation on an instance of DetailViewController and you should be all set.
Is there any way to create something like friend classes in Objective-C?
First declare a "private property" using the standard class extension method:
// VisualNotePlayer.h
#interface VisualNotePlayer : NSObject<NotePlayer>{
#private
UIView *_currentView;
}
// VisualNotePlayer.m
#interface VisualNotePlayer()
#property (nonatomic, retain) UIView *currentView;
#end
#implementation VisualNotePlayer
#synthesize currentView=_currentView;
...
#end
Then recreate the properties in a category:
// VisualNotePlayer+Views.h
#interface VisualNotePlayer(Views)
#property (nonatomic, retain) UIView *currentView;
#end
This interface is only accessible to those who import VisualNotePlayer+Views.h
There is no such thing as a friend class in ObjC.
And to access a private variable of another class you don't even need to be declared as a friend. For example, you can use the runtime functions
id the_private_ivar;
object_getInstanceVariable(the_object, "_ivar_name", &the_private_ivar);
to get the_object->_ivar_name, bypassing compiler checks.