72

Objective-C newbie question. Given the following (fictional) code:

id mysteryObject = [anotherObject mysteriousMethod];

How can I determine at runtime what class mysteryObject is?

4 Answers 4

99

You can use isKindOfClass or isMemberOfClass

For example:

if ([foo isMemberOfClass:[NSBar class]])

3
  • Here a link the documentation for these methods if you need a refresher on which one detects what (I did...) developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/Cocoa/Reference/… Aug 27, 2011 at 21:47
  • 19
    isKindOfClass means the object inherits from the class, isMemberOfClass means exactly the same class
    – bendytree
    Mar 17, 2012 at 2:20
  • 3
    To be a little bit more precise @bendytree, isKindOfClass means exactly the same class while also meaning the object inherits from the class
    – kadam
    Jan 24, 2013 at 18:45
90
[mysteryObject class]

will get you the class object. However, generally you want to do something OOPy like check for conformance to some protocol or interface.

0
54

In a dynamically typed language like Objective-C (or Python or Ruby), you often don't want to know what type of object it is. It's often more productive to think of whether the object responds to the message you wish to send; if it does, you shouldn't care what class it instantiates and if it doesn't you must handle the case regardless of the instance's type. This is known as "duck typing"...if it quacks like a duck it is a duck.

You can test whether an object responds to a particular message (known as a selector in Objective-C) like this:

if([mysteryInstance respondsToSelector:@selector(messageIWishToSend)]) {
  [mysteryInstance messageIWishToSend];
} else {
  //handle case where instance doesn't respond to the desired message
}

Even better than testing for individual selectors is to define a @protocol that describes the API you wish to use for your classes:

// MyProtocol.h
@protocol MyProtocol
- (void)methodInMyProtocol;
@end

//MyClass.h

#import "MyProtocol.h"

@interface MyClass <MyProtocol> {

}
- (void)methodInMyProtocol;
@end

You can test whether an instance implements the MyProtocol protocol like this:

if([mysteryInstance conformsToProtocol:@protocol(MyProtocol)]) {
  [mysteryInstance methodInMyProtocol];
} else {
  // ...
}

This way of doing things is often uncomfortable for folks coming from statically typed languages like Java or C++. You loose the compiler checking types for you. Dynamic typing makes a great many things easier however, including testing since you can easily replace an instance with a fake at test time. Thus the dynamic language approach is to test more and worry about types less. You do have good unit test coverage, don't you?

If you really must determine the class of an instance at run time (and you really probably don't need to), you can use -[NSObject isKindOfClass:] to test whether an instance is an instance of a class or any of its subclasses or -[NSObject isMemberOfClass:] to test whether an instance is an instance of a particular class. You can inspect the Class object directly as the return of -[NSObject class] and you can get the string name of the instance's class with NSStringFromClass([mysteryInstance class]).

4
  • Thanks Barry, its just for "printf" style debugging atm - I'm genuinely curious as to what classes are getting emitted by mysteriousMethod.
    – Justicle
    Jul 14, 2009 at 5:17
  • You can use 'po NSClassFromString([myInstance class])' in gdb or just 'po [myInstance class]'.
    – Barry Wark
    Jul 14, 2009 at 16:50
  • Testing for selectors is better than testing for protocol, because the latter forces classes to explicitly implement the protocol to work
    – user102008
    May 25, 2012 at 0:41
  • Well explained, thanks. It improved some code I had that was checking class and now more correctly checks selectors.
    – mm2001
    Jun 3, 2012 at 0:01
1

I found I had to cast back to id when used with a method defined in a @protocol.

For example, self.listeners is an array of id

If I do this ....

for(id<PropertyListener> listener in self.listeners) {        
    if ( [ [ listener class]  respondsToSelector:@selector(propertyChanged:propertyName:)]) {

I get an error "No known instance method for selector 'class'". Yet, when I cast the id from id to id it works ... Why I do not understand.

[ ((id)listener) class] respondsToSelector .... 

Here is the full loop ...

for(id<PropertyListener> listener in self.listeners) {        
    if ( [ [ ((id)listener) class]  respondsToSelector:@selector(propertyChanged:propertyName:)]) {
        [listener propertyChanged: self propertyName:@"thePropName"];
    } else {
        [listener propertyChanged: self];
    }
}
1
  • 1
    Two points: 1. Generally, you want your protocols to inherit from the NSObject protocol (yes, it's different, though related, to the class). See here. This will solve your problems with the -class method. 2. I'm guessing you are probably wanting to know whether the class instance responds to the selector, e.g. [myObject respondsToSelector:sel], rather than the class itself [[myObject class] responds...]. May 23, 2014 at 9:57

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