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Re: Accessing properties of a generic class
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Re: Accessing properties of a generic class


  • Subject: Re: Accessing properties of a generic class
  • From: Chris Hanson <email@hidden>
  • Date: Thu, 21 Aug 2008 00:33:22 -0700

On Aug 20, 2008, at 7:54 PM, John Murphy wrote:

I have a Person class with name and image properties stored in an array. When I access its properties from within the controller class like this:

	Person *person = [objectArray objectAtIndex:0];
	[nameField setStringValue:person.name];
	[imageArea setImage:person.image];

everything works fine. But when I try to do it generically:

	id object = [objectArray objectAtIndex:0];
	[nameField setStringValue:object.name];
	[imageArea setImage:object.image];

I get errors about the name and image properties not being in a structure or union.

The compiler errors you get are expected. The Objective-C 2.0 dot syntax is mapped to message sends just like bracket syntax is. However, the mapping is more flexible: In the @property declaration you can specify that a property has getter and setter methods with specific names, or that it should be read-only and thus only have a getter.


Because of this flexibility, the compiler needs additional compile- time type information to know how to generate the actual message sends that correspond to the property access.

For example, say I have a class representing a task:

    @interface Task : NSObject {
    @private
        NSString *_title;
        BOOL _completed;
    }

    @property(readwrite, copy) NSString *title;
    @property(readwrite, assign, getter=isCompleted) BOOL completed;

    @end

Now I want to log all completed tasks:

    for (Task *task in self.allTasks)
        if (task.completed) NSLog(@"Completed: %@", task.title);

The property name used is "completed" just as it is in the @property declaration. However, it will be compiled identically to the expression "[task isCompleted]" because that's what the property actually means, since its declaration says "getter=isCompleted".

  -- Chris

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References: 
 >Accessing properties of a generic class (From: John Murphy <email@hidden>)

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