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Home/ Questions/Q 3315766
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T22:23:21+00:00 2026-05-17T22:23:21+00:00

Obviously, with obj-c, there’s usually no reason to write getters and setters (thanks to

  • 0

Obviously, with obj-c, there’s usually no reason to write getters and setters (thanks to useful mr @synthesize).

So now, needing to do just this, I’ve come across the problem that I don’t know how to write them. :p

I’m sure I’m probably not going about solving my problem the right way – it would be much easier to just subclass my object and such – but I’m trying to write category code to add properties because (in the beginning) it was quicker, and because I wanted to learn how to use category code in my app.

I’ve got this:

-(BOOL)isMethodStep {
    return self.isMethodStep;
}

-(void)setIsMethodStep:(BOOL)theBoolean {
    if(self.isMethodStep != theBoolean){
        self.isMethodStep = theBoolean;
    }
}

and I’ve tried it without the if query in the setter, but neither seem to work. Loading it with breakpoints shows that for some reason it gets stuck in a continuous loop in the getter method.

Is this code right or am I doing something wrong?

Thanks
Tom

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T22:23:22+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 10:23 pm

    In

    -(BOOL)isMethodStep {
        return self.isMethodStep;
    }
    

    return self.isMethodStep; calls the same isMethodStep method causing an infinite loop. Same thing for setter.

    Just use your iVars directly in your accessor method implementations:

    -(BOOL)isMethodStep {
        return isMethodStep;
    }
    
    -(void)setIsMethodStep:(BOOL)theBoolean {
        if(isMethodStep != theBoolean){
            isMethodStep = theBoolean;
        }
    }
    
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