Michael Bishop
Michael Bishop

Reputation: 4430

Why would I make an all-optional message protocol?

I'm writing a Cocoa API for a project and the API takes a delegate. The protocol that I came up with declares all the methods as optional, but why would I do that instead of just documenting the delegate methods in a header file and taking a plain id as a parameter?

Upvotes: 1

Views: 273

Answers (3)

Jon Hess
Jon Hess

Reputation: 14257

It also produces code that is more usable in the IDE. For example if I'm looking at

@interface MyController : NSObject <FooBarDelegate> {
}
@end

I can command+double click in Xcode to jump to the definition of FooBarDelegate. With a category there's no formal declaration of intent to be a delegate.

Also, @required can be a problem for future plans with regard to backward binary compatibility and a new preferred method signature.

Upvotes: 0

user23743
user23743

Reputation:

For the benefit of your users. If the object takes delegates conforming to some protocol and they pass something else in, the compiler can tell them. That isn't possible if you take an id and use a category as the delegate method interface.

Upvotes: 6

MarkusQ
MarkusQ

Reputation: 21950

Because having "all of these methods" optional isn't quite the same as permitting "anything you care to send".

Upvotes: 2

Related Questions