EDIT : I had answered this earlier but was deleted by moderator. So I have included some code from the tutorial.
A tutorial which is almost same as the answer posted above - Using Google Protocol Buffers in Objective-C on iOS and the Mac
Follow the steps given in learnvst's answer, and refer the comments for pitfalls. I followed the exact same steps except for
add the directory of google headers to your additional include directories
I added the src/ directory in the header search paths, instead of the google directory.
Also, when i did #import xyz.pb.h
the project wasn't building. When I renamed my .m file to .mm i was able to build. This point is mentioned in the tutorial very subtly :P.
Basically, any .m file which is importing a any .pb.h file, should be renamed with extension .mm
Here's some content from the tutorial -
PROTO FILE
package kotancode;
enum ZombieType {
SLOW = 0;
FAST = 1;
}
message ZombieSighting {
required string name = 1;
required double longitude = 2;
required double latitude = 3;
optional string description = 4;
required ZombieType zombieType = 5 [default = SLOW];
}
ZombieSightingMessage.h
// -- ZombieSightingMessage.h - note my C++ object is not in the public interface.
#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>
@interface ZombieSightingMessage : NSObject
- (void)doSomething;
@end
ZombieSightingMessage.mm
// -- ZombieSightingMessage.mm
#import <UIKit/UIKit.h>
#import "ZombieSightingMessage.h"
#import "zombie.pb.h"
@implementation ZombieSightingMessage
- (void)doSomething {
// Doing random stuff with a UIView here to show the mixing
// of C++ and Objective-C/Cocoa syntax in the same file...
UIView *uiView = [[UIView alloc] init];
[uiView setCenter:CGPointMake(20, 10)];
// instantiate my protobuf-generated C++ class.
kotancode::ZombieSighting *zombieSighting = new kotancode::ZombieSighting();
zombieSighting->set_name("Kevin");
zombieSighting->set_description("This is a zombie");
zombieSighting->set_latitude(41.007);
zombieSighting->set_longitude(21.007);
zombieSighting->set_zombietype(kotancode::ZombieType::FAST);
// Some small tomfoolery required to go from C++ std::string to NSString.
std::string x = zombieSighting->DebugString();
NSString *output = [NSString stringWithCString:x.c_str() encoding:[NSString defaultCStringEncoding]];
NSLog(@"zombie: %@", output);
// Instantiate another zombie from the previous zombie's raw bytes.
NSData *rawZombie = [self getDataForZombie:zombieSighting];
kotancode::ZombieSighting *otherZombie = [self getZombieFromData:rawZombie];
// Dump the second zombie so we can see they match identically...
NSString *newOutput = [NSString stringWithCString:otherZombie->DebugString().c_str() encoding:[NSString defaultCStringEncoding]];
NSLog(@"other zombie: %@", newOutput);
// Grimace all you want, but this is C++ and we need to clean up after ourselves.
free(zombieSighting);
free(otherZombie);
}
// Serialize to NSData. Note this is convenient because
// we can write NSData to things like sockets...
- (NSData *)getDataForZombie:(kotancode::ZombieSighting *)zombie {
std::string ps = zombie->SerializeAsString();
return [NSData dataWithBytes:ps.c_str() length:ps.size()];
}
// De-serialize a zombie from an NSData object.
- (kotancode::ZombieSighting *)getZombieFromData:(NSData *)data {
int len = [data length];
char raw[len];
kotancode::ZombieSighting *zombie = new kotancode::ZombieSighting;
[data getBytes:raw length:len];
zombie->ParseFromArray(raw, len);
return zombie;
}
@end
EDIT : I am using Xcode 4.5. Even after I followed all the steps I was getting a linker error.
symbols not found for architecture i386
Due to this I couldnt run the code on simulator. But it worked on actual device