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An [ApplicationName]-Info.plist file is created with every new iPhone SDK project. My question: is it conventional to add custom property keys to Info.plist and access them programmatically or should they be created in a separate plist?

Perhaps it doesn't much matter, but using the bundle descriptor plist for my custom attributes feels dirty.

[Note that I'm not asking about user-facing properties or settings, so I'm not referring to using a Settings bundle plist.]

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  • Out of curiosity, what kind of custom property lists are you thinking of? All I can think of end up being properties that change the behavior of the app, possibly user-facing ones that haven't made it to a settings UI.
    – mahboudz
    Aug 26, 2009 at 5:23

2 Answers 2

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The Info.plist can contain any custom keys. See the docs:

You can include your keys in your bundle’s information property list file if you want all of your keys stored in one place.

I'm doing this for all my projects: I'm using a script to include the svnversion and build date/time in it to identify each build.

I'm using my own namespace (prefixing the keys) to avoid key name clashes.

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  • Thanks for referencing the doc. I skimmed through and then CMD-F'd for "custom" and came away empty handed. Thanks! Aug 25, 2009 at 21:19
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You add them to Info.plist and then access them programmatically.

Using the bundle descriptor plist for your custom attributes isn't dirty, it's almost universal.

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