58

I'm looking to be able to reference certain state/objects through anywhere in my application. For instance, a user logs in to their application, I need to call a web service and retrieve the users information. Then I want to be able to access this information from anywhere in the application with something like the following:

myAppDelegate *delegate = [[UIApplication sharedApplication] delegate];
user = delegate.u;

Is setting an instance variable as a User object in the app delegate and referencing it from there when needed a poor way of going about it? I typically set it there upon the user's login.

Wanted to hear how the pros handle this one.

4 Answers 4

52

Normally, you should only connect things to the app delegate if they:

  • Were created from the same NIB file as the app delegate (i.e. static UI elements in single window interfaces)
  • Are associated with application-level event handling that passes through the app delegate (like the menu item for the Preferences Window)

For everything else, you should create a singleton which manages access to them.

Jason Coco suggested routing through the Application Controller. In my programs I normally avoid this, as I think it puts too much responsibility at the top level -- I think things should self-manage where possible and that higher level management should only be used when there is a requirement for coordination between peer-level modules.

I'm not going link my own blog but if you Google me and singletons you'll probably find a post I wrote going into more detail.

8
  • 1
    Thanks Matt. Mind if I ask what in specific you're referring to when you say the menu item for the Preferences Window? Dec 11, 2008 at 19:54
  • 1
    Would love to read your blog Matt, but it's unfortunately not up at the moment. Hope it's temporary. Dec 11, 2008 at 20:04
  • 6
    Link to the blog post: cocoawithlove.com/2008/11/…
    – Casebash
    Feb 3, 2010 at 2:15
  • 5
    I'm disappointed by the lack of critism of the idea of using singletons throughout Cocoa code. Singletons are easy and "clean" in a certain sense (no global god class in the form of app delegate) but they do not lend themselves to testing at all well. Most seasoned TDD practitioners would recommend using DI, perhaps using constructor parameters to pass state or state objects around. I was searching for some information about how this is best achieved in Cocoa but all I find is advice telling us to use the Singleton pattern.
    – jkp
    Jun 6, 2010 at 11:56
  • 8
    @jkp: Singletons can be tricky to unit test but don't interpret this as singletons are bad. Actually the reverse is true: it is a flaw of unit testing that it only excels on command pattern implementations and is cumbersome to setup state machines (like the common desktop application model) for each unit test. Using method parameters for every element of application state, just to avoid singletons, is a hideous design pattern. The proper solution is to swap in mock singletons as you would mock any other object (change the object returned by the sharedInstance method) before invoking the test. Jun 7, 2010 at 6:42
31

Matt is a bit too modest. His posting on the subject is one of the best I have read, and deserves a link. http://cocoawithlove.com/2008/11/singletons-appdelegates-and-top-level.html

0
13

I don't see any problem with your approach. I usually use a singleton to handle this situation:

// MyCommon.h:
@interface MyCommon
class MyCommon : NSObject
{
    int user;
};

@property(assign) int user;

+ (MyCommon *)singleton;

@end

// MyCommon.m:
@implementation MyCommon

static MyCommon * MyCommon_Singleton = nil;

+ (MyCommon *)singleton
{
    if (nil == MyCommon_Singleton)
    {
        MyCommon_Singleton = [[MyCommon_Singleton alloc] init];
    }

    return MyCommon_Singleton;
}
@end

The MyCommon singleton is then used anywhere in my application as follows:

int user = [MyCommon singleton].user;
3
  • 1
    I posted this a couple of years ago, and I have learned a few things since then. The important thing to realize about singletons is that they are no different from global variables. That doesn't necessarily mean that they should be avoided in all cases, it just means that they have the same drawbacks, especially when it comes to proper encapsulation and ease of testing. In this case, for example, it becomes very difficult to test individual classes that depend on [MyCommon singleton] in isolation without first setting up the global user value.
    – e.James
    Apr 19, 2010 at 0:22
  • A good alternative to the globally-accessible singleton is to use dependency injection. You essentially create the same MyCommon object in your app delegate, and then pass it down to any child object that needs it, and then continue this process as far down your object hierarchy. This adds a little bit of work along the way, but it results in a much more object-oriented program which is easier to maintain and debug.
    – e.James
    Apr 19, 2010 at 0:27
  • To see how the SO community feels on the matter, here's a link to a question I asked about singletons when I started to make the switch: stackoverflow.com/questions/474613
    – e.James
    Apr 19, 2010 at 0:33
3

Usually you would ask your application's controller for this information and it would be responsible for knowing how to store it/look it up in whatever data model exists. Your application's controller may or may not be the same as the applications delegate (in most simple applications, it is the same).

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