Chapter 1. Objective-C
Objective-C
is a highly dynamic, message-based
object-oriented language. Consisting of a small
number of additions to ANSI C, Objective-C is characterized by its
deferral of many decisions until runtime, supporting its key features
of dynamic dispatch, dynamic typing, and dynamic loading. These
features support many of the design patterns
Cocoa uses, including delegation,
notification, and Model-View-Controller (MVC). Because it is an
extension of C, existing C code and libraries, including those based
on C++, can work with Cocoa-based applications without losing any
of the effort that went into their original development.
This chapter is an overview of Objective-C's most
frequently used features. If you need more detail about these
features or want to see the full language specification, read through
Apple's document, The Objective-C
Programming Language, which is installed as part of the
Developer Tools in
/Developer/Documentation/Cocoa/ObjectiveC.
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