Le 20 juil. 08 à 16:31, Clark Cox a écrit :

On Sun, Jul 20, 2008 at 4:17 AM, Jean-Daniel Dupas
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Le 20 juil. 08 à 10:33, Ken Thomases a écrit :

On Jul 18, 2008, at 11:53 PM, Rick Mann wrote:

I realize after all this, it's not really the Dot Syntax I need. I need
to know how a property name (starts with lower-case letter) is
transliterated into the getter/setter names.

The dot syntax uses the getter and setting specified for the property in the @property declaration. As documented[1], if you don't explicitly supply getter or setter names in that directive, it defaults to the property name for the getter and "set" plus the property name with its first letter
capitalized plus a trailing colon for the setter.


It also has a special case for boolean where getter may be prefixed by "is":
enabled => isEnabled / setEnabled:.

This is not true. Each (read/write) property defines one setter and
one getter, there is no special case for BOOL properties. If you want
the getter to be called "isEnabled", you have to specify that:

@property (getter = isEnabled) enabled;

You're right.
I thought that the "name <=> selector mapping" was the same for properties and for KVC.




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