/* Basic data types for Objective C. Copyright (C) 1993, 1995, 1996, 2004, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GCC. GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later version. GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. Under Section 7 of GPL version 3, you are granted additional permissions described in the GCC Runtime Library Exception, version 3.1, as published by the Free Software Foundation. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License and a copy of the GCC Runtime Library Exception along with this program; see the files COPYING3 and COPYING.RUNTIME respectively. If not, see . */ #ifndef __objc_INCLUDE_GNU #define __objc_INCLUDE_GNU /* This file contains the definition of the basic types used by the Objective-C language. It needs to be included to do almost anything with Objective-C. */ #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { #endif #include /* The current version of the GNU Objective-C Runtime library in compressed ISO date format. This should be updated any time a new version is released with changes to the public API (there is no need to update it if there were no API changes since the previous release). This macro is only defined starting with the GNU Objective-C Runtime shipped with GCC 4.6.0. If it is not defined, it is either an older version of the runtime, or another runtime. */ #define __GNU_LIBOBJC__ 20100911 /* Definition of the boolean type. Compatibility note: the Apple/NeXT runtime defines a BOOL as a 'signed char'. The GNU runtime uses an 'unsigned char'. Important: this could change and we could switch to 'typedef bool BOOL' in the future. Do not depend on the type of BOOL. */ #undef BOOL typedef unsigned char BOOL; #define YES (BOOL)1 #define NO (BOOL)0 /* The basic Objective-C types (SEL, Class, id) are defined as pointer to opaque structures. The details of the structures are private to the runtime and may potentially change from one version to the other. */ /* A SEL (selector) represents an abstract method (in the object-oriented sense) and includes all the details of how to invoke the method (which means its name, arguments and return types) but provides no implementation of its own. You can check whether a class implements a selector or not, and if you have a selector and know that the class implements it, you can use it to call the method for an object in the class. */ typedef const struct objc_selector *SEL; #include "deprecated/struct_objc_selector.h" /* A Class is a class (in the object-oriented sense). In Objective-C there is the complication that each Class is an object itself, and so belongs to a class too. This class that a class belongs to is called its 'meta class'. */ typedef struct objc_class *Class; #include "deprecated/MetaClass.h" #include "deprecated/struct_objc_class.h" /* An 'id' is an object of an unknown class. The way the object data is stored inside the object is private and what you see here is only the beginning of the actual struct. The first field is always a pointer to the Class that the object belongs to. */ typedef struct objc_object { /* 'class_pointer' is the Class that the object belongs to. In case of a Class object, this pointer points to the meta class. Compatibility Note: The Apple/NeXT runtime calls this field 'isa'. To access this field in a portable way, use object_getClass() from runtime.h, which is an inline function so does not add any overhead. */ Class class_pointer; } *id; /* 'IMP' is a C function that implements a method. When retrieving the implementation of a method from the runtime, this is the type of the pointer returned. The idea of the definition of IMP is to represent a 'pointer to a general function taking an id, a SEL, followed by other unspecified arguments'. You must always cast an IMP to a pointer to a function taking the appropriate, specific types for that function, before calling it - to make sure the appropriate arguments are passed to it. The code generated by the compiler to perform method calls automatically does this cast inside method calls. */ typedef id (*IMP)(id, SEL, ...); /* 'nil' is the null object. Messages to nil do nothing and always return 0. */ #define nil (id)0 /* 'Nil' is the null class. Since classes are objects too, this is actually the same object as 'nil' (and behaves in the same way), but it has a type of Class, so it is good to use it instead of 'nil' if you are comparing a Class object to nil as it enables the compiler to do some type-checking. */ #define Nil (Class)0 #include "deprecated/STR.h" /* TODO: Move the 'Protocol' declaration into objc/runtime.h. A Protocol is simply an object, not a basic Objective-C type. The Apple runtime defines Protocol in objc/runtime.h too, so it's good to move it there for API compatibility. */ /* A 'Protocol' is a formally defined list of selectors (normally created using the @protocol Objective-C syntax). It is mostly used at compile-time to check that classes implement all the methods that they are supposed to. Protocols are also available in the runtime system as Protocol objects. */ #ifndef __OBJC__ /* Once we stop including the deprecated struct_objc_protocol.h there is no reason to even define a 'struct objc_protocol'. As all the structure details will be hidden, a Protocol basically is simply an object (as it should be). */ /* typedef struct objc_object Protocol; */ #include "deprecated/struct_objc_protocol.h" #else /* __OBJC__ */ @class Protocol; #endif /* Deprecated include - here temporarily, for backwards-compatibility as reval_t, apply_t, arglist_t and objc_msg_lookup() used to be defined here. */ #include "message.h" /* Compatibility note: the Apple/NeXT runtime defines sel_getName(), sel_registerName(), object_getClassName(), object_getIndexedIvars() in this file while the GNU runtime defines them in runtime.h. The reason the GNU runtime does not define them here is that they are not basic Objective-C types (defined in this file), but are part of the runtime API (defined in runtime.h). */ #ifdef __cplusplus } #endif #endif /* not __objc_INCLUDE_GNU */