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For automation of screenshot capture, and for testing purposes, I would like to list all UIViewController classes of my project.
I do not wish to get a list of all UIKit view controllers, I just want the ones I created in my project.

I want to do this in Objective-C code, at runtime, because I then will need to instantiate some of the listed classes.
For example, in my unit tests, I might want a test that assert that all UITableViewCell subclasses return the same height that the height of the item in the xib associated, and this object is not a UIView subclass but a UITableViewCell subclass.
An other intended use is to add to the documentation of the project a screenshot of all my UIViewController classes.

Note that this code will not be shipped to customer. It will only be used in testing and scripting on the developer machine.

I guess I could parse the files included in pbxproj, but that feels wrong and not robust.
A simple ls *ViewController.h on my project works too, but same feeling about it.
Any other idea?

Bonus if I can then extend this way on other classes, to for example get all the UITableViewCells I created, or all UIViews.

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  • do you want to do it in the runtime environment (e.g. test module that links aginst your program) or create a OS X Application that parses your code? Mar 6, 2013 at 16:28
  • @MartinUllrich at runtime (added the clarification to the question)
    – Guillaume
    Mar 6, 2013 at 16:42

2 Answers 2

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Using my NSObject+Subclasses category, you can easily get all subclasses of UIViewController.

To get your view controllers only, filter them like this:

NSSet *myViewControllerClasses = [[UIViewController subclasses_xcd] filteredSetUsingPredicate:[NSPredicate predicateWithBlock:^BOOL(id evaluatedObject, NSDictionary *bindings) {
    return [[NSBundle bundleForClass:evaluatedObject] isEqual:[NSBundle mainBundle]];
}]];

Then you can do whatever you want with the content of myViewControllerClasses that contains Class objects.

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1

Using the runtime, it's a bit hard. You can use the definitions of class_t and class_rw_t (data-member of class objects) to explore subclass trees efficiently.

To filter your classes, you might need to look at the beginning of the class names (prefix) or maybe a base VC class if have created one for your project.

See this article

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  • Nice article, thank you. In the article, I didn't see any way to filter between UIKit and my classes. Did I miss something? Any take on that?
    – Guillaume
    Mar 6, 2013 at 16:51

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