Trying to understand protocols and their use... having a hard time of it. The more I read, the less I am able to even formulate questions about them. I've read the statement "a protocol is a contract" a hundred times, but it just doesn't click.
I "only" want to develop really simple apps, so assume that I would not myself create a protocol for any of my classes.
I do want to use Apple's Scenekit framework, for example, and understand that I am required to implement some methods to do this - for example the SCNSceneRendererDelegate. The compiler enforces this, and it knows to do that because in my header file I have inserted:
@interface AAPLGameViewController : UIViewController <SCNSceneRendererDelegate>
the bit between the angle brackets specifically.
For the prototypes of the functions I have to implement, I go look for a
@protocol
...
@end
section in the SCNSceneRendererDelegate header file.
But now I've come across some @protocol sections (e.g. in the UIApplication header file) that contain @properties!! I thought @protocol was only about implementing certain methods, what is a property doing there?
I also came across in one of the answers here that specifying a protocol name when creating an instance of an object allows me to use objects that I know nothing about. I would be very grateful to get a few simple practical examples of where this would be useful.
And finally, in Java, the counterpart to (Obj-C) @protocols are called interfaces. Is there a counterpart in Java to (Obj-C) @interface?
Thanks much, cheers.