What exactly does @synthesize do?
I have seen the following piece of code:
//example.h
MKMapView * mapView1;
@property (nonatomic, retain) MKMapView * mapView;
//exa开发者_如何学Pythonmple.m
@synthesize mapView = mapView1
What is the relation between mapView
and mapView1
?
Does it create a set
and get
method for mapView1
?
In your example, mapView1
is an instance variable (ivar), a piece of memory storage that belongs to an instance of the class defined in example.h
and example.m
. mapView
is the name of a property. Properties are attributes of an object that can be read or set using the dot notation: myObject.mapView
. A property doesn't have to be based on an ivar, but most properties are. The @property
declaration simply tells the world that there is a property called mapView
.
@synthesize mapView = mapView1;
This line tells the compiler to create a setter and getter for mapView
, and that they should use the ivar called mapView1
. Without the = mapView1
part, the compiler would assume that the property and ivar have the same name. (In this case, that would produce a compiler error, since there is no ivar called mapView
.)
The result of this @synthesize
statement is similar to if you had added this code yourself:
-(MKMapView *)mapView
{
return mapView1;
}
-(void)setMapView:(MKMapView *)newMapView
{
if (newMapView != mapView1)
{
[mapView1 release];
mapView1 = [newMapView retain];
}
}
If you do add that code to the class yourself, you can replace the @synthesize
statement with
@dynamic mapView;
The main thing is to have a very clear conceptual distinction between ivars and properties. They are really two very different concepts.
@synthesize
creates a getter and a setter for the variable.
This lets you specify some attributes for your variables and when you @synthesize
that property to the variable you generate the getter and setter for the variable.
The property name can be the same as the variable name. Sometimes people want it to be different so as to use it in init
or dealloc
or when the parameter is passed with the same variable's name.
From the documentation:
You use the @synthesize keyword to tell the compiler that it should synthesize the setter and/or getter methods for the property if you do not supply them within the @implementation block.
As I just run into this problem when editing legacy code I want to make additional notes to the existing answers one needs to be aware of.
Even with a newer compiler version it sometimes does make a difference if you omit @synthesize propertyName
or not.
In the case you declare an instance variable without underscore while still synthesizing it, such as:
Header:
@interface SomeClass : NSObject {
int someInt;
}
@property int someInt;
@end
Implementation:
@implementation SomeClass
@synthesize someInt;
@end
self.someInt
will access the same variable as someInt
. Not using a leading underscore for ivars does not follow the naming conventions but I just came into a situation where I had to read and modify such code.
But if you now think "Hey, @synthesize is not important any more as we use a newer compiler" you are wrong! Your class then will result in having two ivars, namely someInt
plus an autogenerated _someInt
variable. Thus self.someInt
and someInt
will not address the same variables any more. If you don't expect such behavior as I did this might get you some headache to find out.
As per apple documentation @Synthesize is used only to rename instance variables. For example
@property NSString *str;
@synthesize str = str2;
Now in the class you can not use _str
as the above line has renames the instance variable to str2
@property
allows objects to be used by objects in other classes, or in other words makes the object public.
When you create a property in @interface, that property will be automatically back by an instance variable named as _propertyName. So when you create a property named as firstName, behind the scene compiler will create an instance variable named as _firstName by default. Compiler will also create the getter and setter method for you(i.e. firstName, setFirstName).
Now when you synthesize the property by @synthesize firstName, you are simply telling the compiler rename my instance variable(_firstName) by firstName. If you want to rename your backed up instance variable by different name you can simply assign different name while synthesizing the property name(i.e. @synthesize firstName = myFirstName), by doing this your property is backed up by an instance variable named as myFirstname.
So, in short, most of the time @synthesize used to rename your instance variable backed up by your property.
See the apple docs
Basically the synthesize creates a setMapView and mapView methods which set and get mapView1
It creates getter and setter for your object. You can access with something like this :
MKMapView* m = object.mapView;
or
object.mapView = someMapViewObject
mapView1 is the name of the ivar in the class, mapView is the name for the getter / setter method(s).
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