Does a method which I check for with respondsToSelector have to actually exist?
What if I only define it in the interface part and fail to implement it? I’m looking at a poor-man’s virtual function in Objective-C.
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First, yes the method actually has to exist for the check to succeed in the context you describe.
respondsToSelector:will returnNOif the method is not implemented.More importantly, I think you mean a poor man’s pure virtual function in Objective-C. All instance methods are “virtual” in Objective-C; since method lookup is done a run-time, the subclass’ implementation will always be used, even from a pointer of the superclass type. In Objective-C, there is no such thing as a pure virtual base class. You can often achieve what you want by either using a
@protocolto define an API or using a base class that provides an implementation that throws anNSNotImplementedExceptionas its body. Subclasses would obviously have to override the implementation, making it effectively pure virtual.