Class A has a UIImage.
Class B has a static reference to a class of type A.
Before class B is instantiated, I want to call a static method in class B to assign an instance of class A.
+ (void)setClassAReference:(ClassA*)classA
{
classA_ = classA;
}
Is this possible?
Before I delved into my current project, I created a sample one, and was able to set an integer value, then instantiate B with it keeping the stored value and allowing access to it.
However, in my current project, XCode refuses to allow me to pass an integer value:
Non-static method in class A:
- (UIImage*)imageWithIdentifier:(ImageIdentifier)identifier; // identifier is enum type
After class B is instantiated, I try to call a method in A:
UIImage *img = [classA_ imageWithIdentifier:ImageIdentifier_Foo];
But I get an implicit conversion warning. The auto-complete shows (id) instead of (ImageIdentifier). I’ve triple-checked all my method signatures and they all use the enum type.
Am I using static variables incorrectly or is there another problem? I realize I could use a singleton, but I’d prefer not to if possible.
I’m adding the enum declaration here:*
typedef enum
{
ImageIdentifier_Foo = 0,
ImageIdentifier_Bar
} ImageIdentifier;
*real names changed to protect the innocent.
Firstly…
If you want to initialize static variables on a class before it is instantiated you use the class method on NSObject
This is where you can assign your static ClassA variable in ClassB.
Secondly….
Make sure you retain that classA variable, otherwise it will be released.
Thirdly…..
Regarding your implicit conversion… what is variable ‘a’, above this you wrote classA_. Can you show your enum declaration. Have you imported ClassA ?
I don’t have any compile error with this:
ClassA.h
ClassA.m
ClassB.h
ClassB.m