A question of style: Returning 'pairs'
A question of style: Returning 'pairs'
- Subject: A question of style: Returning 'pairs'
- From: James Montgomerie <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 2008 19:48:02 +0100
Say I have a method that needs to return two equally important values
(in my case, a string and an offset into it). I am overthinking how
to do it, and I though it would be interesting to see what others have
done.
I see these opportunities (my use of 'object' and 'value' is blurred
below, since I'm thinking of the abstract case - assume that both
values could be objects):
1) Just return the first value, and have the caller supply an argument
that the second value gets written into (akin to how NSError is
customarily used). This seems a bit unclean, since one value is not
more important than the other, and both are necessarily returned.
2) Define a custom C struct (like NSRect, but with e.g. 'string' and
'offset' members) and return objects in it. Just like any other
returned objects, the caller would be expected to retain them
individually if it needed to keep them around.
3) Define a custom Obj-C class with two properties [e.g. 'string' and
'offset'] and return an object of that class (with properties
appropriately set).
4) Create a 'Pair' C struct with two ids in it. Use it like the
custom struct in (2). This struct is more reusable than the one in
(2), so this solution seems less 'heavyweight', but it is less
descriptive.
5) Define a 'Pair' Obj-C class with 'first' and 'second' properties,
use as (3). Again, more reusable, less 'heavy' seeming than (3), but
less descriptive.
6) Return an NSArray with two items in it (this seems the least
descriptive option, from the point of view of someone reading the
header).
7) Return an NSDictionary with two items in it, keyed by their
property names. This seems a bit wasteful, since the dynamicisim of a
dictionary is not required, and is also not so descriptive from a
header-reading perspective.
Oh, and there's also 8) Rename the file .mm, and use a C++
std::pair<id, id> class. (Only joking :-)
How would you do this? Are there other, better options?
Jamie.
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