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Whats difference between declaring variable in .m file bellow @implementation and in .h fie in @interface??

@implementation PiechartViewController
NSMutableArray *impIDs;

I observed if i create 3 objects of piechartViewController new object overwrites previous object data i.e impIDs of 3 different object has same value that of last instantiated object.

instead if I followed this way

in ".h" file

@interface PiechartViewController : UIViewController {
    NSMutableArray * impIDs;

Code works properly.Means impIDs has 3 different values.

2
  • your post needs editing. Use the {} for codes, etc... Dec 23, 2010 at 7:42
  • Post a code with proper format. add the comment
    – Raxit
    Dec 23, 2010 at 8:35

1 Answer 1

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First, class names start with uppercase letters and instance variables start with lower case letters. It is convention.

@implementation PiechartViewController
NSMutableArray *impIDs;

In the above, impIDs is a variable that is defined within the scope of the file containing that code. While it is a global, more or less, you won't be able to access it from other files without declaring it somewhere that is visible to them (something like extern NSMutableArray *impIDs).

@interface PiechartViewController : UIViewController {
    NSMutableArray * impIDs;

Here, impIDs is an instance variable and, thus, each instance will have storage for it's own isolated bit of data accessible in the impIDs instance variable slot.

I'd suggest you read this.

2
  • i revert few of your changes just to reflect the fact that both declaration are for same thing but done it in different ways
    – saurabh
    Dec 23, 2010 at 9:47
  • Mmm... K. That kinda made my answer wrong. Edited so your edits will no longer cause confusion. :)
    – bbum
    Dec 23, 2010 at 16:44

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