I have a very basic question. I'm a new iPhone programmer. My question is can anybody tell me how can I pass values by reference to a function in obj. C? I know how to do it in VB and C#. But don't know how to do it in Obj c.
Thanks
Pass-by-reference in Objective-C is the same as it is in C.
The equivalent to the following C# code:
void nullThisObject(ref MyClass foo)
{
foo = null;
}
MyClass bar = new MyClass();
this.nullThisObject(ref bar);
assert(bar == null);
is
- (void)nilThisObject:(MyClass**)foo
{
[*foo release];
*foo = nil;
}
MyClass* bar = [[MyClass alloc] init];
[self nilThisObject:&bar];
NSAssert(bar == nil);
and
- (void)zeroThisNumber:(int*)num
{
*num = 0;
}
int myNum;
[self zeroThisNumber:&myNum];
NSAssert(myNum == 0);
zeroThisNumber
example above, the pointer is passed by value, meaning that a copy of the pointer is passed, that is if we change the num
to point to another int the myNum
will not change. We by convention say "by reference" as having the address of the original obj we can directly change it (by dereferencing it).
*
and **
as described by Darren, but still a copy of the pointer is passed as I mentioned in my previous comment (the work is done though). Of course this is a kind of theoretical issue.
If you use Objective C++, which you can do by naming your file with extension .mm, or telling Xcode to compile all source as Objective C++, then you can pass references in the same way you do with C++, eg:
- (OSStatus) fileFileInfo: (FileInfo&)fi;
There is no passing by reference (in C++ sense) in Objective C. You can pass your objects by pointer, and for primitive types by value.
Example:
void func(NSString* string)
{
...
}
void func(NSInteger myint)
{
...
}
..
NSString* str = @"whatever";
NSInteger num = 5;
func(str);
func(num);
__block
storage type.
Sep 27, 2012 at 15:17
Try this way :
-(void)secondFunc:(NSInteger*)i
{
*j=20;
//From here u can change i value as well
//now i and j value is same (i.e i=j=20)
}
-(void) firstFunc
{
NSInteger i=5;
[self secondFunc :&i];
//i value is 20
}
Hope it helps!!
It depends on what you mean. The closest thing C (and thus Objective-C) has to a reference type is pointers. As the name implies, pointers point to data that exists somewhere else. In order to get the thing being pointed to, you have to dereference the pointer. Objects in Objective-C are never directly accessed — you always use pointers to talk to them. You can also pass pointers to other types than objects.
Pointers are kind of a tricky subject. I would definitely recommend reading up on C to get a feel for them.
There's an argument to be had if you want to get more than one address from a resulting function call. You can do so instead by creating a wrapper class and passing that instead. For example:
@interface AddressWrapper : NSObject {
NSArray *array;
NSString *string;
}
@property (nonatomic, assign) NSArray *array;
@property (nonatomic, assign) NSString *string;
@end
In *.m:
@implementation AddressWrapper
@synthesize array, string;
@end
-(void) getAddresses: (AddressWrapper*) wrapper {
wrapper.array = myNSArray;
wrapper.string = myNSString;
}