Does Objective-C support traits/mixins?

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太阳男子
太阳男子 2020-12-28 20:10

Are there any techniques for emulating traits or mixins in Objective-C?

In Scala, for example, I can do something like this:

trait ControllerWithData         


        
3条回答
  •  心在旅途
    2020-12-28 20:56

    There's no direct language support, but you could accomplish something similar with message forwarding. Let's say you have trait classes "Foo" and "Bar", which define methods "-doFoo" and "-doBar", respectively. You could define your class to have traits, like this:

    @interface MyClassWithTraits : NSObject {
        NSMutableArray *traits;
    }
    @property (retain) NSMutableArray* traits;
    
    -(void) addTrait:(NSObject*)traitObject;
    @end
    
    @implementation MyClassWithTraits
    @synthesize traits;
    
    -(id)init {
        if (self = [super init]) {
            self.traits = [NSMutableArray array];
        }
        return self;
    }
    
    -(void) addTrait:(NSObject*)traitObject {
        [self.traits addObject:traitObject];
    }
    
    /*  Here's the meat - we can use message forwarding to re-send any messages
        that are unknown to MyClassWithTraits, if one of its trait objects does
        respond to it.
    */
    -(NSMethodSignature*)methodSignatureForSelector:(SEL)aSelector {
        // If this is a selector we handle ourself, let super handle this
        if ([self respondsToSelector:aSelector])
            return [super methodSignatureForSelector:aSelector];
    
        // Look for a trait that handles it
        else
            for (NSObject *trait in self.traits)
                if ([trait respondsToSelector:aSelector])
                    return [trait methodSignatureForSelector:aSelector];
    
        // Nothing was found
        return nil;
    }
    
    -(void) forwardInvocation:(NSInvocation*)anInvocation {
        for (NSObject *trait in self.traits) {
            if ([trait respondsToSelector:[anInvocation selector]]) {
                [anInvocation invokeWithTarget:trait];
                return;
            }
        }
    
        // Nothing was found, so throw an exception
        [self doesNotRecognizeSelector:[anInvocation selector]];
    }
    @end
    

    Now, you can create instances of MyClassWithTraits, and add whatever "trait" objects you'd like:

    MyClassWithTraits *widget = [[MyClassWithTraits alloc] init];
    [widget addTrait:[[[Foo alloc] init] autorelease]];
    [widget addTrait:[[[Bar alloc] init] autorelease]];
    

    You could make these calls to -addTrait: in MyClassWithTraits' -init method, if you want every instance of that class to have the same kind of traits. Or, you could do it like I've done here, which allows you to assign a different set of traits to each instance.

    And then you can call -doFoo and -doBar as if they were implemented by widget, even though the messages are being forwarded to one of its trait objects:

    [widget doFoo];
    [widget doBar];
    

    (Edit: Added error handling.)

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