Re: Strange problem when not declaring the functions in interface
Re: Strange problem when not declaring the functions in interface
- Subject: Re: Strange problem when not declaring the functions in interface
- From: "Ivan S. Kourtev" <email@hidden>
- Date: Mon, 18 Apr 2005 16:36:12 -0400
The default return type is (id). If you don't declare the functions
you should do:
i = i + (int)[self foo1];
--
ivan
On Apr 18, 2005, at 4:08 PM, Pradeep Kumar wrote:
Hi All
I am not sure if I am missing something really fundamental or it is
really a bug. But I have
this strange problem that's occurring when functions are not declared
in the interface.
Thought of broadcasting this incase some one has any insight on why
this is happening.
Please review the following code snippet. Assume that the functions
foo1 and foo2 are
declared in the interface declaration of MyObject.
@implementation MyObject
-(void)awakeFromNib
{
NSLog(@"[self foo1] returned %d", [self foo1]);
NSLog(@"[self foo2] returned %d", [self foo2]);
int foo1 = [self foo1];
int foo2 = [self foo2];
NSLog(@"Variables foo1 = %d\tfoo2 = %d", foo1, foo2);
int i = 100;
NSLog(@"i = %d", i);
i = i+[self foo1];
NSLog(@"Executing i = i+[self foo1] = %d", i);
i = i+[self foo2];
NSLog(@"Executing i = i+[self foo2]; = %d", i);
}
-(int)foo1
{
return 10;
}
-(int)foo2
{
return 20;
}
@end
The result you get in the log is
[self foo1] returned 10
[self foo2] returned 20
Variables foo1 = 10 foo2 = 20
i = 100
Executing i = i+[self foo1] = 110
Executing i = i+[self foo2]; = 130
The results are perfect.
Now remove the declarations of foo1 and foo2 from the interface file
of MyObject. After
doing this here's what I get.
[self foo1] returned 10
[self foo2] returned 20
Variables foo1 = 10 foo2 = 20
i = 100
Executing i = i+[self foo1] = 410
Executing i = i+[self foo2]; = 1660
See the results of the last two statements. 410 and 1660. Why is this
happening?
I am using XCode 1.5 with Component versions Xcode IDE: 389.0, Xcode
Core: 387.0,
ToolSupport: 372.0 on 10.3.9 (7W98). I know it is recommended that
functions be declared
in the interface. But can not declaring the functions cause such a
huge difference in ways
you can use non-declared functions?
Thanks
prady
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