Create singleton using GCD's dispatch_once in Objective-C
This is a perfectly acceptable and thread-safe way to create an instance of your class. It may not technically be a "singleton" (in that there can only ever be 1 of these objects), but as long as you only use the [Foo sharedFoo]
method to access the object, this is good enough.
instancetype
instancetype
is just one of the many language extensions to Objective-C
, with more being added with each new release.
Know it, love it.
And take it as an example of how paying attention to the low-level details can give you insights into powerful new ways to transform Objective-C.
Refer here: instancetype
+ (instancetype)sharedInstance
{
static dispatch_once_t once;
static id sharedInstance;
dispatch_once(&once, ^
{
sharedInstance = [self new];
});
return sharedInstance;
}
+ (Class*)sharedInstance
{
static dispatch_once_t once;
static Class *sharedInstance;
dispatch_once(&once, ^
{
sharedInstance = [self new];
});
return sharedInstance;
}
MySingleton.h
@interface MySingleton : NSObject
+(instancetype)sharedInstance;
+(instancetype)alloc __attribute__((unavailable("alloc not available, call sharedInstance instead")));
-(instancetype)init __attribute__((unavailable("init not available, call sharedInstance instead")));
+(instancetype)new __attribute__((unavailable("new not available, call sharedInstance instead")));
-(instancetype)copy __attribute__((unavailable("copy not available, call sharedInstance instead")));
@end
MySingleton.m
@implementation MySingleton
+(instancetype)sharedInstance {
static dispatch_once_t pred;
static id shared = nil;
dispatch_once(&pred, ^{
shared = [[super alloc] initUniqueInstance];
});
return shared;
}
-(instancetype)initUniqueInstance {
return [super init];
}
@end