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Home/ Questions/Q 7049867
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 28, 20262026-05-28T03:04:24+00:00 2026-05-28T03:04:24+00:00

If I have a method and class like this: @implementation Animal -(void) move{ id

  • 0

If I have a method and class like this:

@implementation Animal
  -(void) move{
    id *object = [object that called move];
   }

@end

Say I have two other classes

@implementation C1
   ...
   [self.animal move]
   ...
@end

@implementation C2
  ...
  [self.animal move]
  ...
@end

Without passing the instance ‘self’ into move, is their some way to get access to self from move?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-28T03:04:25+00:00Added an answer on May 28, 2026 at 3:04 am

    You cannot do this in Objective-C, the only work around I could suggest is sending a reference of the sender when you message your class, such as:

    @implementation Animal
      -(void) move:(id)sender{
        id *object = [object that called move];
       }
    
    @end
    

    Calling:

    @implementation C1
       ...
       [self.animal move:self];
       ...
    @end
    
    @implementation C2
      ...
      [self.animal move:self];
      ...
    @end
    

    You can then use the isMemberOfClass: or isKindOfClass: to determine what type of object the sender is, isKindOfClass will return YES if the class in question is the class you send or a subclass of that. Whereas isMemberOfClass: will only return YES if the class you are messaging is an instance of the class you are sending it

    example:

    A * aClass; // is just A
    [...]
    
    B * bClass; // is a subclass of A
    [...]
    
    [aClass isMemberOfClass:[A class]]; // YES 
    [bClass isMemberOfClass:[A class]]; // YES
    
    
    [aClass isKindOfClass:[A class]]; // YES 
    [bClass isKindOfClass:[A class]]; // NO
    
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