I am reading a book which teaches that we should implement a designated initializer of class, and then let other initializers call this one (which I agree with).
Now, I am in a section in this book, which says: "The designated initializer of UITableViewController is initWithStyle:". And then goes in the implementation like this:
// inside ItemsViewController.m, subclass of UITableViewController
-(id) init{
// Call the superclass's designated initializer
self = [super initWithStyle:UITableViewStyleGrouped];
if (self) {
}
return self;
}
- (id)initWithStyle:(UITableViewStyle)style
{
return [self init];
}
After this code, the book also says: "This will ensure that all instances of ItemsViewController use the UITableViewStyleGrouped style, no matter what initialization message is sent to it."
To stick to the principle I described in the beginning of the post, I might had implemented this class like this:
// inside ItemsViewController.m, subclass of UITableViewController
// Implement the designated initializer first
-(id) initWithStyle:(UITableViewStyle)style
// Call the superclass's designated initializer
self = [super initWithStyle:UITableViewStyleGrouped];
if (self) {
}
return self;
}
// Call designated initializer
- (id)init
{
return [self initWithStyle: nil];
}
But I think I am missing something? I think the book uses init
as designated initializer in their case?
initWithStyle:
and throw an exception there, e.g.NSAssert(NO, @"You are not supposed to call this method. Use init instead");