This has been bugging me for a long time, and I have tried to look it up many times.
When I first began learning Objective-C, I remember looking into class variables. I saw many threads on stack overflow and elsewhere that basically said, "Objective-C doesn't support class variables like C does, but there are some workarounds."
Reading this made me shy away from using class variables, especially because I have read hundreds of times that global variables tarnish the elegance of OOP.
So I have a very open ended, opinionated, and conversational question: Should I use class variables in objective C? Also, am I doing it right?
Here is my situation: I am making an app, and I set up a touch handling class to deal with all the input received from screen touches. The data is pretty useful, and I would like every single sprite to have access to it.
Since every object is a subclass of my GameObject class, I figure I just make a class variable, done like so:
header for GameObject class:
+(SSTouchHandler *)touchHandler;
+(void)setHandler:(SSTouchHandler *)handler;
implementation for GameObject class:
static SSTouchHandler *touchHandler = nil;
+(SSTouchHandler *)touchHandler
{
if (touchHandler)
return touchHandler;
else
return nil;
}
+(void)setHandler:(SSTouchHandler *)handler
{
touchHandler = handler;
}
Now, this works. This works beautifully.
I can refer to my handler with [GameObject touchHandler] from every place I need.
This is all I could ever want and more.
But should I use this method? Am I dirtying the beauty that is object oriented programming?
Is there a way I should touch up this process to make it work optimally?
Thanks for any and all input, I probably rambled a bit, I just don't want to proceed with a faulty game structure.
if
block in yourtouchHandler
method is not needed, just doreturn touchHandler;
. If it's nil, it will return nil.