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Home/ Questions/Q 228897
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T19:43:14+00:00 2026-05-11T19:43:14+00:00

Example: I have 10 view controllers, which are all allocated and initialized in the

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Example:

I have 10 view controllers, which are all allocated and initialized in the same way:

UIViewController *controller = [[MyViewController alloc] initWithNib];

(note that -initWithNib is a custom method of a UIViewController subclass)

The next view controller class is OtherViewController, and so on. I want to load the view controllers lazily, just when I need them. But to do that, I need to have some kind of “array” that will give me the corresponding class for a given index, so that I can initialize it.

I ended up creating a method with a big switch-statement, that will just do that nasty allocation and initialization separately for every single view controller. I’m not happy with that. There it would be much better if I could assign the appropriate class to a variable, and then at the end of the switch statement just allocate and initialize that class from the variable.

Is there a way to achieve that?

EDIT: I’ve found a function

id class_createInstance(Class cls, size_t extraBytes)

and every class seems to have a property “class”. But I can’t assign it to an instance variable. This doesn’t work:

Class cls = [UIImage class];
cls *image = [cls imageNamed:@"avatar.png"];

The first line compiles. But the second one gives an error: “image undeclared”.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T19:43:15+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 7:43 pm

    If you know the names of the classes at compile time, you can assign the classes to Class variables. For example:

    static Class factory[2];
    
    factory[0] = [MyViewController1 class];
    factory[1] = [MyViewController2 class];
    ...
    

    Then you could have (classid would be a constant known at compile time that would map to a desired class:

    -(UIViewController*)createViewController:(int)classid
    {
        return [[factory[classid] alloc] init];
    }
    

    Assuming that method is defined in a class named MyFactory, you can then do:

    MyFactory * fac = [[MyFactory alloc] init];
    UIViewController * v1 = [fac createViewController: 0]; // typed
    id v2 = [fac createViewController: 1]; // untyped
    

    If you don’t have the compile time name of the class, you can simply do the following:

    #include <objc/objc-runtime.h>
    
    id object = [[NSClassFromString(@"TheClassName") alloc] init];
    

    Since your original question involves a set of UIViewControllers though, there’s no reason to lose type safety with the latter method.

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