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Home/ Questions/Q 404343
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T17:17:59+00:00 2026-05-12T17:17:59+00:00

I’m a little bit confused now after I’ve seen a code snippet for iPhone

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I’m a little bit confused now after I’ve seen a code snippet for iPhone SDK which makes use of -> rather than dot notation. It looks a lot like PHP but it does work on the iPhone. Can someone explain what’s up with ->, is that some deep C-secret I should know about?

Example:

- (void)setFileURLs: (NSArray*)elements {
    if (self->fileURLs != elements)

fileURLs is an instance variable or property, like so:

@property(nonatomic, retain) NSArray *fileURLs;

and there’s an @synthesize for fileURLs.
Now what I think this is: Because this is the setter method for fileURLs, it would be bad to use dot notation to access the instance variable. In fact, when I do it, the application crashes. That is because it calls itself over and over again, since the dot notation accesses the accessor method and not the ivar directly. But -> will access the ivar directly.

If that’s right, the question changes a little bit: Why then write “self->fileURLs” and not just “fileURLs”? What’s the point of adding that self-> overhead in front of it? Does it make sense? Why?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T17:17:59+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 5:17 pm

    a->b is just another way for writing (*a).b. This is a way for accessing fields of a structure or instance variables of an object that are referenced by a pointer.

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