I'm new to Objective C and I haven't been able to find out if there is the equivalent of a static constructor in the language, that is a static method in a class that will automatically be called before the first instance of such class is instantiated. Or do I need to call the Initialization code myself?

Thanks

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3 Answers

up vote 27 down vote accepted

There is the +initialize class method that will be called before a class is used.

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Thank you, that's exactly what I was looking for, but I did searches to "static init", "static initializer", etc and didn't find it. – Franklin Munoz Jun 14 '09 at 5:26
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In almost every case, where in Java you'd say "static," you say "class" in Objective-C. – Chuck Jun 14 '09 at 18:21
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The +initialize method is called automatically the first time a class is used, before any class methods are used or instances are created. You should never call +initialize yourself.

I also wanted to pass along a tidbit I learned that can bite you down the road: +initialize is inherited by subclasses, and is also called for each subclasses that doesn't implement an +initialize of their own. This can be especially problematic if you naively implement singleton initialization in +initialize. The solution is to check the type of the class variable like so:

+ (void) initialize {
  if ([self class] == [MyParentClass class]) {
    // Once-only initializion
  }
  // Initialization for this class and any subclasses
}

All classes that descend from NSObject have both +class and -class methods that return the Class object. Since there is only one Class object for each class, we do want to test equality with the == operator. You can use this to filter what should happen only once ever, versus once for each distinct class in a hierarchy (which may not yet exist) below a given class.

On a tangential topic, it's worth learning about the following related methods, if you haven't already:


Edit: Check out this post by @bbum that explains more about +initialize: http://www.friday.com/bbum/2009/09/06/iniailize-can-be-executed-multiple-times-load-not-so-much/

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"if ([self class] == [MyParentClass class])" [self class] is redundant here. you can just say if (self == [MyParentClass class]) – user102008 Jul 22 '11 at 22:47
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A bit of an addendum to this topic:

There is another way to create a 'static constructor' in obj-c, using an __attribute directive:

// prototype
void myStaticInitMethod(void);

__attribute__((constructor))
void myStaticInitMethod()
{
    // code here will be called as soon as the binary is loaded into memory
    // before any other code has a chance to call +initialize.
    // useful for a situation where you have a struct that must be 
    // initialized before any calls are made to the class, 
    // as they would be used as parameters to the constructors.
    // e.g.
    myStructDef.myVariable1 = "some C string";
    myStructDef.myFlag1 = TRUE; 

    // so when the user calls the code [MyClass createClassFromStruct:myStructDef], 
    // myStructDef is not junk values.
}
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