From the NSNotificationCenter
doc:
notificationSelector
Selector that specifies the message the receiver sends notificationObserver to notify it of the notification posting. The method specified by notificationSelector must have one and only one argument (an instance of NSNotification
).
[Emphasis mine.]
You must provide a selector with the correct signature; if you don't, it may work, but it may stop working just when you don't want it to.
The reason that you might want to get the notification is so that you can pass along information, in the form of the userInfo
dictionary that you can specify when you yourself post a notification using notificationWithName:object:userInfo:
. You can ignore the argument when the method is called, but the parameter has to be there in the method signature.
As for buttons and their actions, the docs say you can have one of three signatures*:
the UIKit framework allows three different forms of action selector:
- (void)action
- (void)action:(id)sender
- (void)action:(id)sender forEvent:(UIEvent *)event
The IBAction
return type is equivalent to void
(there is no return value), except that its presence in a method in your header allows Interface Builder to know that the method is intended as an action, so that you can hook up controls.
The reasons for wanting to get the button (or other control) are similar to that of notifications. In case you have many buttons in your interface, some of which (such as in a table view) connect to the same action, you may need to distinguish the exact things that you do by the pressed button's identity.
*: For completeness' sake, I want to mention that this is not the case on Mac; there, an action method must have the form: - (IBAction)action:(id)sender
.