vote up 1 vote down star

I'm reading the source code of an open-source project and I've encountered the following category definition in an implementation file:

@interface QCView (Private)
- (void)_pause;
- (void)setClearsBackground:(BOOL)flag;
@end

At first I thought that the setClearsBackground method was being added to the QCView class definition. But when I search through this implementation file, I find no implementation of a setClearsBackground method (although this message is sent to a QCView instance in a few places within the file).

Why would someone declare a method on a framework class like QCView but then not implement that method anywhere? My only guess is that this is a way to circumvent the compiler and call a method that isn't declared in the QCView.h file. But this seems unlikely, because how would the developer know that an implementation for this method even exists?

flag

1 Answer

vote up 6 vote down check

The developer probably used a tool such as class-dump in order to generate headers which list all the methods implemented by a framework. This is useful if you need to access SPI and have no other choice. Without the declaration, Objective-C makes assumptions about the method parameters and, beyond generating a warning, may generate an incorrect method invocation.

All the usual caveats about an undocumented interface breaking in a future OS revision apply. At the minimum, you should check if the object responds to that method (-[NSObject respondsToSelector]). For extra paranoia you can wrap the invocation in an exception block, in case the method remained but its behavior changed.

link|flag
What is "SPI"? – erikprice Apr 8 at 11:53
System Programming Interface. Essentially, any (technically) externally accessible function or method that is not explicitly documented or supported. – Nicholas Riley Apr 8 at 12:56
Awesome answer, thanks. I downloaded class-dump and ran it on QuartzComposer.framework and the above methods do appear in the output, so I think it's safe to say that this is exactly what the author was doing. Thanks again. – erikprice Apr 8 at 16:36

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.