2

I've tried using both:

NSClassFromString and objc_getclass 

to return a class, so I can create it at runtime, but both functions return nil for some classes, for example "TestClass". Note that NSClassFromString works for me for 99% of classes.

If I add

[TestClass class];

before I call NSStringFromClass or objc_getclass it, it works. and if I try to just create the class using a class reference, i.e.:

[TestClass alloc];

it works too. So how can I force the class to load at runtime so NSClassFromString or objc_getclass will not return nil?

Brad Parks
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3 Answers3

6

I ran into this same problem. In my case I had code which was looking up the class using

Class aClass = objc_getClass("Foo");

Which worked when the Foo class was in the same project bundle as my AppDelegate.

As part of refactoring the code, I moved the Foo class and associated model classes out of the AppDelegate project into a common static lib project that would be easier to test and reuse.

When I moved the Foo class into libFooBar the objc_getClass("Foo") now returned nil instead of the Foo class.

To solve this, I put in call to the class I am interested in so that the classes from libFooBar are registered with the Objective-C runtime. I did this like so:

Foo* foo = [[Foo alloc] init];
[foo release];
Class aClass = objc_getClass("Foo");

Now the objc_getClass("Foo") returns the Foo class again instead of nil.

I can only assume that the static library classes are not registered until a call to one of the classes in the static library is made.

Mark Thistle
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3

The Objective-C Runtime Reference can help you here. For example, the documentation for objc_getClass says, "The Class object for the named class, or nil if the class is not registered with the Objective-C runtime." Looking around for discussion of registration you find this tidbit in objc_getClassList:

"The Objective-C runtime library automatically registers all the classes defined in your source code. You can create class definitions at runtime and register them with the objc_addClass function."

(And of course the docs are out of date because objc_addClass is deprecated, objc_allocateClassPair and objc_registerClassPair in its place.)

This looks like a world of hurt if you don't make this easy on yourself. Any chance you can just reference your dynamic classes in code when the app starts?

JOM
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Neil Mix
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3

I had to manually add the class (e.g. TestClass.m) to the build settings. Build Phases > Compile Sources > + > TestClass.m

Patrick Collins
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