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What conventions are people here following for naming of instance variables and method arguments - particularly when method arguments are used to set ivars (instance variables)?

In C++ I used to use the m_ prefix for ivars a lot. In C# I followed the convention of disambiguating purely by use of this. for ivars. I've since adopted the equivalent in C++ too (this->).

In Objective C I've tried a few things but none have really seemed satisfactory.

Unless someone suggests something really nice I am resigned to the fact that I'll have to compromise (but please, don't make me use the the prefix for args!), so I'm interested to hear what the majority say - especially from those who have been using ObjC for a while.

I did some due diligence before posting this and a couple of good resources I found where:

They give me some ideas, but I'm still keen to hear what others are doing.

[edit] Just to clarify: It's specifically how you distinguish ivars from method args that I'm looking for - whether that's through prefixes or some other technique.

[edit 2] Thanks for all the responses and discussion points. I'm not closing this, but will just say that, as I indicated in my comments to the accepted answer, I've gone with the convention of prefixing init args with the (and setter args with new, which I was doing anyway). This seems to be the best balance of forces - even if I'm not keen on the aesthetic myself.

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4 Answers

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As you've noted, the Cocoa style is to use method argument names like theValue if the argument name will conflict with an instance variable. There shouldn't be many times that this comes up in Objective-C 2.0 style code, however. The assumption is that you shouldn't (usually) be accessing instance variables directly. Mostly this is because doing so circumvents the Key-Value Observing machinery in Cocoa. Rather, the expectation is that you'll access and mutate properties via getter/setter methods. In Objective-C 2.0, it's easy to declare these properties and automatically @synthesize the getters/setters, so there's not much excuse for not using them. In fact, on 64-bit systems, the runtime will automatically create the instance variables for you, obviating the need to declare them and reducing the urge to use them.

The only time you should be accessing instance variables directly is in -init and -dealloc methods:

@interface MyObject : NSObject 
{
  id ivar;
}

@property (retain,readwrite) id ivar; //or whatever retain/copy/assign and read/readwrite makes sense
@end

@implementation MyObject
@synthesize ivar;

- (id)initWithIvar:(id)theIvar {
  if(self = [super init]) {
    ivar = theIvar;
  }

  return self;
}

- (void)dealloc {
  [ivar release];
}

The reason the ivar should be used directly in these cases is beacuse the getter/setter may have side effects that depend on a fully initialized instance, thus making them dangerous in -init and -dealloc where the state of the object is fully initialized. In all other cases, you should be using self.ivar (or [self ivar] and [self setIvar:newValue]).

It would seem that methods other than -initWithXX shouldn't have the naming conflict. If they do, shouldn't they be refactored to not have that parameter or for the Class to not have the instance variable?

This leaves just the -initWithXX methods where you would often find a conflict between arguments and ivars. For this case, you can use any of the approaches you mention if you really can't stand the Cocoa style. Prefixing with _ works and is relatively common (I believe the @synthesize'd setters and getters will automatically do the right thing in this case, but you may have to explicitly set the _ivar as the backing).

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Thanks Barry. The trouble with using accessors within the class implementation is that they add a significant overhead - which you may be able to ignore in desktop apps, but on the iPhone they can add up. Also, as you say, they may have side-effects that you don't want from within the impl... – Phil Nash Feb 15 at 15:48
...[cont]. That said it is mostly in init methods that the clash occurs (in mutators I usually use newX or similar anyway). Since the consensus seems to be on the or a as a prefix for the arguments I can perhaps live with that just within init methods. That keeps the ivars cleaner. – Phil Nash Feb 15 at 15:50
I would verify that property access vs. direct ivar access is an unacceptable performance hit. I clarified above why you have to access ivar directly in init/dealloc. Otherwise, it seems dangerous to have direct access along side property access since it muddies the semantics of the ivar state. – Barry Wark Feb 15 at 20:53
I hear ya. Of course most of the time it's ok - but there have been one or two places that it's been an issue. I'd rather adopt a convention that I don't have to make too many exceptions to. – Phil Nash Feb 16 at 8:10
Direct access by impl and property access by outside users is pretty much the established idiom in most languages - although I accept that there are compelling cases for making all access go via accessors by default. I haven't yet bought into that fully, however. – Phil Nash Feb 16 at 8:11
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Here's how Apple does it.

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Thanks wfarr. However that doesn't actually describe a naming convention for ivars or method arguments (other than to say, "Make sure the name of the instance variable concisely describes the attribute stored.") – Phil Nash Feb 14 at 23:43
Your edit clarified things. I believe I've seen people just use _ as a prefix to differentiate ivars from method args. – wfarr Feb 15 at 4:56
the trouble with _ as a prefix is that it's reserved by Apple, and they use it in a number of base classes (info on that in some of the links I gave). – Phil Nash Feb 15 at 15:42
Apple does not reserve the underscore prefix for instance variable names. Only for method names. – Chris Hanson Feb 16 at 23:39
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To complete all known Objective-C styleguides here is the google version. What they do is to add an underscore after the the member varname. For instance BOOL isActive_;.
So make a choice and stick with it. I also prefer the "_" prefix for my apps.

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The sample code produced by Apple usually uses a "_" prefix. I think I also saw some using mFoo or m_foo. Some don't bother with prefixes at all and just use a normal name, however that gets confusing later on. In general when defining method parameters, the naming convention is to use an "a", "an", "the" or "new" prefix. For instance:

@interface Foo : NSObject {
    id _bar;
}
@property (nonatomic, retain) id bar;

- (id) initWithBar:(id)aBar;

@end

@implementation Foo
@synthesize bar = _bar;

- (id) initWithBar:(id)aBar {
    self = [super init];
    if(self != nil) {
        _bar = aBar;
    }
    return self;
}

@end

I find that this convention works quite well. I used to not bother with the prefix but that made things confusing sometimes. Using a prefix clearly indicates that it's an instance variable. The @synthesize bar = _bar convention is used by Apple in their (iPhone) sample code.

The instance variable would not typically be used anyway, so if you find the "_" prefix annoying it doesn't matter, because you'd use [self bar] (or self.bar if you're into that kind of thing) anyway.

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Thanks sebnow. Apple reserve the underscore prefix for themselves to avoid name conflicts (see: developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/… - and the end of "Typographic Conventions"). I'd prefer to avoid it – Phil Nash Feb 15 at 15:54
I didn't know about that. Good catch. – sebnow Feb 16 at 5:25
Apple does not reserve the underscore prefix for instance variable names. Only for method names. – Chris Hanson Feb 16 at 23:31
@Chris: In that article it says, "Avoid the use of the underscore character as a prefix meaning private, especially in methods. Apple reserves the use of this convention" - note especially in methods - not only in methods... – Phil Nash Feb 17 at 18:01
...[cont] I interpret that (in the context) as saying, "this is reserved in the case of method names, but it's also a guideline not to use it for other names too". So I'm not saying you're wrong - and I recant my use of the word "reserved" - but it still warns against using it – Phil Nash Feb 17 at 18:04

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