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Is there a way to store a selector in an NSDictionary, without storing it as an NSString?

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5 Answers 5

108

SEL is just a pointer, which you could store in an NSValue:

NSDictionary *dict = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys: 
                       [NSValue valueWithPointer:@selector(foo)], @"foo",
                       nil];

To get the selector back, you can use:

SEL aSel = [[dict objectForKey:@"foo"] pointerValue];
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  • 6
    Maybe also mention that to get the SEL back, you have to do: SEL *aSel = [[dict objectForKey:@"foo"] pointerValue];
    – dreamlax
    May 12, 2010 at 20:54
  • 1
    When I retrieve SEL as you suggest and try self performSelector:*aSel withObject:nil afterDelay:0.0]; I get: EXC_BAD_ACCESS. The correct way of retrieving them is SEL aSel = [[dict objectForKey:@"foo"] pointerValue]; [self performSelector:aSel withObject:nil afterDelay:0.0];
    – nacho4d
    Aug 24, 2010 at 3:29
  • Newbie question: How do you execute your selector? May 13, 2013 at 13:34
  • @JohanKarlsson: E.g. using one of the performSelector: variants. More detail would be better suited for a new question though. May 13, 2013 at 14:01
  • 1
    @GeorgFritzsche IMHO your answer would be more complete if you just add one row as an example on how to use the SEL. Not so much work, but nice. Only a suggestion. I agree that how to use selector in a more wide approach could be a question own its own. May 22, 2013 at 6:17
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An alternative to Georg's solution would be to convert the selector into an NSString before storing it the NSDictionary:

NSDictionary *dict = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys: 
                      NSStringFromSelector(@selector(foo)), @"foo",
                      nil];

SEL selector = NSSelectorFromString([dict objectForKey:@"foo"]);

This technique, though uses more memory, gives you the ability to serialize the entire NSDictionary as a string via libraries like JSONKit.

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  • Georg, it was my fault. I did set a selector for the dictionary key used to retrieve it. Thanks for following up. I'll update my answer.
    – David H
    Feb 16, 2012 at 2:02
  • *Oops, typo. I meant to say: "I forgot to set a selector value for that key in the dictionary."
    – David H
    Feb 16, 2012 at 2:14
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    Ah, that explains it. Good to hear you figured it out. Feb 16, 2012 at 19:24
  • 1
    If you're using strings for the selector names I would recommend using [obj respondsToSelector:selector] to guard against typos. Feb 21, 2014 at 14:49
6

An NSDictionary is really just a CFDictionary that retains and releases all keys and values. If you create a CFDictionary directly, you can set it up to not retain and release values. You can typecast a CFDictionaryRef to an NSDictionary * and vice versa.

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  • I do this quite a bit for when I have Foundation objects as keys but non-Foundation objects as values.
    – dreamlax
    May 12, 2010 at 20:52
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In case of using UILocalNotification the only way is to use NSSelectorFromString([dict objectForKey:@"foo"]). With valueWithPointer the app crashing when setting userInfo property of UILocalNotification object. Be careful.

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While Georg's answer should work, NSValue does also support encoding any value using an Objective-C type encoding string, which has a special way of representing SEL— with a ":" (as opposed to the "^v" produced by -valueWithPointer:, which translates into void *).
source: Objective-C Runtime Programming Guide - Type Encodings

Working off of Georg's solution, the best API-compliant way to put a SEL into an NSValue into an NSDictionary would be:

// store
NSDictionary *dict = @{
    @"foo": [NSValue value:&@selector(foo) withObjCType:@encode(SEL)]
};

// retrieve
SEL aSel;
[dict[@"foo"] getValue:&aSel];



The rationale for handling a SEL as its own beast is that the docs describe it as “an opaque type”— which means that its internal workings (even what it's typedefd to) are off-limits to app programmers; Apple may mix it up at any time in the future.

Also, using void *s to force the system to do what you want it to do was useful in C back in the '90s, when most of us didn't know any better.  You're better than that now.

The above approach should only be used if the retrieval of the SEL happens during the program's running duration— you shouldn't be storing that NSDictionary to disk.  If you do need to store SELs long-term (across app launches), you should follow David H's approach and convert it to an NSString.

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