9

I am converting some Objective C code to C# for use in a Monotouch iPhone app.

In Objective C, the following equivalence condition is tested:

if ([cell.backgroundView class] != [UIView class])
    ... do something

cell is a UITableViewCell.

In C#, I'd like to test the same condition using (so far) the following:

if ( !(cell.BackgroundView is UIView))
    ... do something

Is the understanding of the Objective C code correct, i.e. it tests the type of cell? What would the equivalent be in C#?

3
  • Cool! I didn't know you could develop for the iPhone in C#.
    – Cheeso
    May 13, 2011 at 17:57
  • Check out Monotouch - it's great!
    – Ryan
    May 13, 2011 at 17:58
  • @Cheeso, see MonoTouch May 13, 2011 at 17:59

2 Answers 2

9

Looks right, unless UITableViewCell inherits from UIView.

in which case you'll need

if (cell.BackgroundView.GetType() !=  typeof(UIView))
    ... do something
1
  • Well, it's not whether UITableViewCell inherits from UIView, but whether the background view inherits from UIView, which it must to be assigned to cell.BackgroundView. So you'll need to use the code provided here.
    – Ed Marty
    May 13, 2011 at 18:02
2

The correct way to test for type in Objective-C is like this:

if ([[cell backgroundView] isKindOfClass:[UIView class]]) {
  //the backgroundView is a UIView (or some subclass thereof)
}

If you want to test for explicit membership, you can do:

if ([[cell backgroundView] isMemberOfClass:[UIView class]]) {
  //the backgroundView is a UIView (and not a subclass thereof)
}
2
  • Great, I have seen other examples which also recommends this way of checking. The question then is, what if ([cell.backgroundView class] != [UIView class]) check for?
    – Ryan
    May 13, 2011 at 18:08
  • @Ryan Bates: that's basically "isNotMemberOfClass" (if such a method existed); it's also equivalent to ![view isMemberOfClass:[UIView class]] May 13, 2011 at 18:36

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