I have noticed that with Xcode4 Apple has updated the application templates to include underscores before instance variables.

// Xcode4
@property (nonatomic, retain) IBOutlet UIWindow *window;
@synthesize window = _window;

.

// Xcode3
@property (nonatomic, retain) IBOutlet UIWindow *window;
@synthesize window;

I know there are differing opinions on the usefulness of this but I was just curious if the updated templates where:

  • (1) Highlighting a new best practice.
  • (2) Showing how Apple does things but meaning for you to do it the old way.
  • (3) Its just personal taste, it does not matter.
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Take a look to this question. – Alex Terente May 26 '11 at 13:59
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In this case it's correct, because it's referring to an ivar declared in an Apple framework. You still shouldn't use single leading underscores for your own ivar names. – NSResponder May 30 '11 at 8:41
Thank you @ NSResponder, thats what I was looking for, much appreciated ... – fuzzygoat May 30 '11 at 18:56
I don't think NSResponder is right. Because Apple's own documentation now recommends it in your own variables. See developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/iphone/…. Rather, it looks like a reversal of policy by Apple, and a good one I think because there's less confusion between ivars and the properties that access them. – Rhubarb Aug 29 '11 at 19:10
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up vote 6 down vote accepted

It's interesting because in the past (pre-iOS), Apple used to discourage the use of underscore prefixes for ivars:

Avoid the use of the underscore character as a prefix meaning private, especially in methods. Apple reserves the use of this convention. Use by third parties could result in name-space collisions; they might unwittingly override an existing private method with one of their own, with disastrous consequences. See “Private Methods” for suggestions on conventions to follow for private API.

But with a modern Objective-C runtime, I believe ivar naming conflicts in subclasses has been eliminated, so this is not a problem anymore. So I think that's why they're making the templates use an underscore prefix by default, to match what Apple's internal code looks like.

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Ivar naming conflicts haven’t been eliminated — if a superclass declares an ivar in its @interface block, no subclass may declare an ivar with the same name. That said, the modern runtime features the non-fragile ABI, which allows class extensions to define their own ivars, which in certain cases allows the removal of ivars from the @interface block entirely which, in turn, helps with preventing name conflicts. – Bavarious May 26 '11 at 14:09
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