1

So we have a library with header files as below (for instance):

Public

  • MyCustomClass.h (subclasses MyClass)

Private

  • MyClass.h

When this is imported into an app however it then complains that it can't find MyClass.h. This is fair enough. Its #imported into MyCustomClass.h and yet its hidden.

So I changed it to a forward class declaration @class MyClass. Now it complains that I can't use a forward declaration for a super class (also makes sense).

How can I get around this then? I need to subclass something, but I only want people using the library to have access to the child class, not the super class.

2
  • Thanks trojanfoe, but I'm actually looking to hide the existence of that class all together and not the methods. I want people to be able to subclass MyCustomClass, and use all the methods but not subclass the original MyClass (MyCustomClass overrides some methods you see - so I want to force people to use MyCustomClass over MyClass). Mar 13, 2013 at 15:35

1 Answer 1

1

You're writing a library, and you want clients to instantiate MyCustomClass which inherits from MyClass. But clients should not ever instantiate MyClass.

Approach 1: You don't actually need or want to hide MyClass. You just want to avoid instantiating instances of it.

  • a) Make its constructor private
  • b) Create a factory method that creates instances of MyCustomClass.

The factory might be part of MyClass, or it could be elsewhere.

@implemenation MyClass
+ (MyCustomClass*) createWith: (Param*) someData;

Approach 2: consider composition rather than inheritance. Let MyCustomClass own an object of type MyClass, and let it do all the work:

 @implementation MyCustomClass
 @property (nonatomic,strong) MyClass* myClassInstance;
 - (void) doSomething 
 {
      [self.myClassInstance doSomething];
 }

Since clients can't subclass MyClass anyway, the inheritance is an implementation detail. Don't inherit when you don't need to.

Approach 3: Are you sure you really want to expose MyCustomClass? Is it really an object, or is it a protocol? Perhaps your library should offer the interface publicly, and both MyClass and MyCustomClass are private implementations.

6
  • there is no private constructor in ObjC
    – Bryan Chen
    Mar 21, 2013 at 21:09
  • Can't you make init private? Mar 21, 2013 at 22:56
  • there is no private method in ObjC. you can hide the declaration, but since init is defined in NSObject, you can't do anything to hide it
    – Bryan Chen
    Mar 21, 2013 at 23:06
  • Approach 2 is how we solved this issue. Its a touch "messy" - feels wrong, but is the only way we can really solve this. :) Many thanks! Mar 24, 2013 at 11:45
  • Composition is BETTER than inheritance. It feels messier, but it's not. Reserve inheritance for situations where it's the only answer. Mar 24, 2013 at 13:13

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