I have been following the rule of having:
@MyClassName in the header file of a class
&&
#import "MyClassName" in the implementation
I have now decided to subclass one of my view controllers. If I overwrite a method then I get the following message:
Receiver 'MyClassName' for class message is a forward declaration
To over come this I need to put the #import into the header file which doesn't seem to follow what I thought was best practices.
Can someone explain if I have misunderstood the use of @class?
Or if I am dong things correctly, can someone please explain you need to break best practices and use #import in header file when subclassing?
Many thanks.
Edit:
Thanks for the answers. I think I need to add some more detail to clarify my situation and hopefully my understanding. Here is my header for my base class:
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
#import "CorePlot-CocoaTouch.h"
@class Organisation;
@interface LongCallDetailViewController : UIViewController <UITableViewDelegate, UITableViewDataSource>
In my impementation I have
#import "Organisation.h"
My subclass header contains the following:
#import "LongCallDetailViewController.h"
@interface LongCallSubclassViewController : LongCallDetailViewController
@end
If I override a method in the subclass and try to use an Organisation object it gives me the error as I stated above. Therefore I either need to add #import "Organisation.h" into the base classes header or duplicate the #import "Organisation.h" into the subclasses implementation file. Both of which seem wrong to me.
Many thanks.