3

I'm trying to implement in Objective-C a proxy for an object in the following way:

- (NSMethodSignature*) methodSignatureForSelector:(SEL)sel
{
    return [_proxifiedObject methodSignatureForSelector:sel];
}

- (void) forwardInvocation:(NSInvocation *)invocation
{
    char returnType = invocation.methodSignature.methodReturnType[0];
    if(returnType == '@')
    {
        id anotherProxy = [[[MyProxy alloc] initWithInvocation:invocation] autorelease];
        [invocation setReturnValue:&anotherProxy];
    } else {
        invocation.target = _proxifiedObject;
        [invocation invoke];
    }
}

Another proxy should construct the object from this invocation. But while the object is under construction we should be able to collect and store invocations to it to have a chance to process them after the object is constructed. To achieve this I should implement 2 methods: methodSignatureForSelector: and forwardInvocation:. The second is quite easy but the first is what the question is all about.

We should know the class of the proxified object to be able to provide signature but the invocation which anotherProxy is initialized with does not provide information about the returned object's class. Is there a way to obtain the class of the object which will be returned by the method using Apple's Objective-C runtime?

UPDATE:

I understand that the actual class of the returned object may be different but there may be the only class with which the method is declared. If method is declared as

 - (SomeClass*) someMethod;

in the interface I expect SomeClass to be obtained.

UPDATE:

Finally I've solved my problem. The solution is not elegant but it 'just works'. I've wrote this method:

static NSMutableDictionary* dictionarySelectorsToSignatures;

+ (NSMethodSignature*) methodSignatureForUnknownClassForSelector: (SEL) sel
{
    NSMethodSignature* candidate = [dictionarySelectorsToSignatures objectForKey:[NSNumber numberWithLongLong:(long long) sel]];
    if(candidate == nil)
    {
        int classesCount = objc_getClassList(NULL, 0);
        Class* classes = malloc(sizeof(Class) * classesCount);
        objc_getClassList(classes, classesCount);
        for(int i = 0; i < classesCount; i++)
        {
            if(class_getClassMethod(classes[i], @selector(instanceMethodSignatureForSelector:)) != NULL)
            {
                NSMethodSignature* signature = [classes[i] instanceMethodSignatureForSelector:sel];
                if(signature != nil)
                {
                    if(candidate != nil)
                    {
                        if(![candidate isEqual:signature])
                        {
                            return nil;
                        }
                    } else {
                        candidate = signature;
                    }
                }
            }
        }
        if(candidate != nil)
        {
            [dictionarySelectorsToSignatures setObject:candidate 
                                                forKey:[NSNumber numberWithLongLong:(long long)  sel]];
        }
    }
    return candidate;
}

This method returns signature for selector if it is not ambiguous and nil in other case. Its main con is the fact that it does not support class/list of classes modification in runtime thus it can be used only if all classes are registered and code does not modify classes (potentially risky to use it with KVO!).

3 Answers 3

2

Is there a way to obtain the class of the object which will be returned by the method using Apple's Objective-C runtime?

No - if a method returns a class-type, you can't know the actual - concrete - type before it has returned. With the concrete class-type being unknown, you can't find out what return type any of it's method may have.

9
  • But is there a function (or smth else) that retrieves the declared type of the method? Feb 10, 2012 at 20:39
  • @Vsevolod: In a case like [[a f] g], you can get the signature for f, but not for g without invoking f first. That is because f and g are only message names and don't have a specific type. You only get method signatures from the combinations class & selector, protocol & selector or instance & selector. Feb 10, 2012 at 20:59
  • Is this supposed to be fully generic or can you assume specific instances, use protocols on the caller side, ...? Feb 10, 2012 at 21:22
  • That supposed to be fully generic. Feb 10, 2012 at 22:04
  • OK. Let go from the problem. The problem I try to solve is to resend the message that proxy had received to the proxified object. I do not know the class of the proxified object since it does not exist yet. I can't get the class of it before it is created. Maybe there is any other way to archive my goal (resend message) that does not require method signature acquiring? Feb 10, 2012 at 22:10
0

Here's how to check if "instance" is an NSString

if ([instance isKindOfClass:[NSString class]]( {
  //do something
}

That good?

2
  • No. I need to obtain a Class not to check whether the object belongs to a specific class. Feb 10, 2012 at 19:17
  • well if you have few possible classes, you can check which one is your variable an instance of, and you would know the class too Feb 10, 2012 at 21:06
0

You can get the actual name of the class of the object:

e.g. for an object foo

NSLog(@"foo is an object of class %@", NSStringFromClass([foo class]));
2
  • 1
    That is not my case because I do not have an object itself. I have a method (actually not a method but an instance of NSInvocation) that returns an object. Feb 10, 2012 at 19:33
  • Either way, you have an object - and you can use this to know what class it is. You don't have to use the NSLog statement, but the NSStringFromClass() function.
    – Abizern
    Feb 11, 2012 at 12:36

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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