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I asked a similar question, but I couldn't get it working exactly. I'm building an iPhone app, and there is a method that I want called from different files. I figured the easiest way would simply be to make a method in another file, and call the method from the other files.

Here are some problems. I need to return multiple values from the method, after passing it multiple values. For example, I'm passing it: (int, int, int, string, string). And it needs to return all of those values, after they have been changed. Someone showed me this code:

- (NSDictionary *)EndOfTurn:(int)varTurns withFatness:(int)varFatness
{
    varTurns--;

    if (varTurns <= 0) {
    	varFatness = varFatness - 5;
    }
    else {
    	varFatness += 2;
    }

    return [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:[NSNumber numberWithInt:varFatness], @"FATNESS", [NSNumber numberWithInt:varTurns], @"TURNS", nil];

}

However, this code doesn't work, and I need some more information to really understand it. Let's assuming I'm passing it these values:

int varMoney;
int varNumSheep;
int varNumShepherds;
NSString *test1;
NSString *test2;

So I need to get all of these values back from the method.

How do I declare this in the header file? This should be in an Objective-C file, but could you give me the code for the entire file so I can see where it would go with the @implementation and @end, whatnot. Also, how would I call this method?

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I would like to point out that 'withFatness' is an awesome piece of a function. – Malaxeur Nov 7 at 4:44
you'll also need to retain the result of this function. Because the dictionary you're returning is from a convenience method, it is autoreleased, and will disappear shortly if not retained. i.e. when you call it you'd do something like this: NSDictionary *myDic = [self EndOfTurn:turns withFatness:fatness]; [myDic retain]; – Kenny Winker Nov 7 at 7:37
and then [myDic release]; when you're good and done with it. – Kenny Winker Nov 7 at 7:38

3 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

Since you can only return a single value from any method in C and C-derived languages, you simply need to return a single value that represents all of your other values. This is what your sample code is doing with an NSDictionary.

The sample code is correct, even if it's a bit contrary to common Objective-C style.

What you declare in the header file is simply the declaration of the method, that is:

@interface MyClass : NSObject
- (NSDictionary *)EndOfTurn:(int)varTurns withFatness:(int)varFatness;
@end

In the source file, then:

@implementation MyClass
// code, as given above
@end
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Kk, I'll try that out. – Wayfarer Nov 7 at 5:07
Okay, what is the syntax for calling this function? I've imported the header file already, but when I try calling the function it says "Expected : Before : token. This the call: (NSDictionary *)EndOfTurn:(int)varTurns withFatness:(int)varFatness; I'm passing it the Variables "varTurns" and "varFatness" – Wayfarer Nov 7 at 5:26
Your call should look like [object EndOfTurn:varTurns withFatness:varFatness] - the (int) bits are just for the definition, not the call. – Kendall Helmstetter Gelner Nov 7 at 5:34
vote up 6 vote down

What about passing in the values as pointers?

For example:

- (void) getValuesForInt:(int *)int1 anotherInt:(int *)int2 aBool:(BOOL *)bool1 anotherBool:(BOOL *)bool2 {
  if (*int1 == 42 && *int2 == 0) {
    *int1 = 0;
    *int2 = 42;
  }
  if (*bool1 == NO) {
    *bool2 = YES;
  }
}

Then you can invoke it like:

int int1 = 42;
int int2 = 0;
BOOL bool1 = NO;
BOOL bool2 = NO;
[self getValuesForInt:&int1 anotherInt:&int2 aBool:&bool1 anotherBool:&bool2];
NSLog(@"int1: %d int2: %d bool1: %d bool2: %d", int1, int2, bool1, bool2);
//prints "int1: 0 int2: 42 bool1: 0 bool2: 1"

Edit:

This works equally well with objects. You'll often see this used when dealing with NSError objects:

NSError *error = nil;
[anObject doSomething:foo error:&error];

Can be implemented as:

- (void) doSomething:(id)terrible error:(NSError **)error {
  if ([terrible isEqual:reallyBad]) {
    if (error != nil) { *error = [NSError errorWithDomain:@"domain" code:42 userInfo:nil]; }
  }
}
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It should be *int2 == 0. Also your NSLog line is missing the parameters. – Chris Suter Nov 7 at 5:12
I think the other solution is a little more effective, I tried that earlier but it didn't work well with strings. – Wayfarer Nov 7 at 5:26
@Chris whoops! that's what i get for typing code in the browser. =) – Dave DeLong Nov 7 at 5:29
@Wayfarer edit answer to give an example of how this would work with objects. – Dave DeLong Nov 7 at 5:32
vote up 5 vote down

If you have that many different things that need to be returned from a method, either encapsulate it into an NSDictionary as others have suggested or consider just defining a class. You can declare the instance variables and properties to encapsulate the data, as needed.

Defining a class to encapsulate such information proves to be quite efficient and maximizes flexibility. If you need to refactor your app such that the collection of data gains new fields, needs to be saved for later, or might need to gain functionality, a class will ease these changes.

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+1 for creating a new class. @Wayfarer: embrace the world of OOP. – mahboudz Nov 7 at 8:08

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