If you're implementing a subclass, you can, within your implementation, explicitly call the superclass's method, even if you've overridden that method, i.e.:

[self overriddenMethod]; //calls the subclass's method
[super overriddenMethod]; //calls the superclass's method

What if you want to call the superclass's method from somewhere outside the subclass's implementation, i.e.:

[[object super] overriddenMethod]; //crashes

Is this even possible? And by extension, is it possible to go up more than one level within the implementation, i.e.:

[[super super] overriddenMethod]; //will this work?
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2 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

A more pleasant option (for debugging) is to add a category method which does it for you:

- (void) callSuperMethod { [super overriddenMethod]; }

The fact that there’s no more convenient way to do this is very much by design.

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You can send [[[object class] superclass] methodForSelector: ...] and invoke through the IMP pointer directly, if you want... but if you're doing this, there's probably something very wrong with your application's design.

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Not design. Need this for debugging. – executor21 May 20 '10 at 19:54
In that case, IMP away. :) – Nicholas Riley May 20 '10 at 23:03
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