To be precise, when you write [myProperty doSomeAction]
, you are not actually accessing the property, but accessing the instance variable (used as the backing variable of the property) directly.
You only access the property (thru its setter and getter) with the dot-notation [self.myProperty doSomeAction]
(or by calling the setter/getter explicitly like [[self myProperty] doSomeAction]
which is an exact equivalent, as this is what the compiler translates to when compiling your code)
So when you write [myProperty doSomeAction]
, as it access the variable directly — contrary to [self.myProperty doSomeAction]
which calls the getter of myProperty
thus making an additional method call / message send — then yes in theory it will be faster as you will gain one message dispatch.
But in practice you won't see any improvement, so there is no need to consider accessing the variable directly (and it will make you loose flexibility if you want to implement it another way later)
Moreover, if you use the Modern Runtime (which is the case if you code for any version of iOS, Legacy Runtime being only used in 32-bits Mac OSX), then explicitly defining the backing variable for the property is not needed anymore. Thus you can declare the @property
in the .h and @synthesize
it in the .m without any instance variable (the compiler will generate it for you at compile time), and in such case you won't be able to call the (non-existing) instance variable! (at least not before the @synthesize
directive)