Is it possible to encode an Objective-C block with an NSKeyedArchiver?

I don't think a Block object is NSCoding-compliant, therefore [coder encodeObject:block forKey:@"block"] does not work?

Any ideas?

link|improve this question
feedback

1 Answer

up vote 12 down vote accepted

No, it isn't possible for a variety of reasons. The data contained within a block isn't represented in any way similar to, say, instance variables. There is no inventory of state and, thus, no way to enumerate the state for archival purposes.

Instead, I would suggest you create a simple class to hold your data, instances of which carry the state used by the blocks during processing and which can be easily archived.

You might find the answer to this question interesting. It is related.


To expand, say you had a class like:

@interface MyData:NSObject
{
    ... ivars representing work to be done in block
}

- (void) doYourMagicMan;
@end

Then you could:

MyData *myWorkUnit = [MyData new];

... set up myWorkUnit here ...

[something doSomethingWithBlockCallback: ^{ [myWorkUnit doYourMagicMan]; }];

[myWorkUnit release]; // the block will retain it (callback *must* Block_copy() the block)

From there, you could implement archiving on MyData, save it away, etc... The key is treat the Block as the trigger for doing the computation and encapsulate said computation and the computation's necessary state into the instance of the MyData class.

link|improve this answer
Thank you for the answer, I think I understand why it is not straightforward to simply encode them. However I am confused about your suggestion of using a class to hold the state used by blocks. Would you be able to expand on how to implement that? In my situation I have basic void callback blocks, i.e. void^{ do_stuff; }. Thanks! – rebo Jan 31 '10 at 19:18
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.