The first question is what scope you want your constants to have, which is really two questions:
If they are specific and internal to a single class, declare them as static const
at the top of the .m file, like so:
static NSString *const MyThingNotificationKey = @"MyThingNotificationKey";
If they pertain to a single class but should be public/used by other classes, declare them as extern
in the header and define them in the .m:
//.h
extern NSString *const MyThingNotificationKey;
//.m
NSString *const MyThingNotificationKey = @"MyThingNotificationKey";
If they should be global, declare them in a header and define them in a corresponding module, specifically for those constants.
You can mix and match these for different constants with different levels of how global you want them to be, and for different global constants that simply don't belong together—you can put them in separate modules, each with its own header, if you want.
#define
?The old answer is “macros don't have type information”, but compilers today are pretty smart about doing all the type-checking for literals (what macros expand to) as well as variables.
The modern answer is because the debugger won't know about your macros. You can't say [myThing addObserver:self forKey:MyThingNotificationKey]
in a debugger command if MyThingNotificationKey
is a macro; the debugger can only know about it if it is a variable.
enum
?Well, rmaddy beat me to it in the comments: enum
can only define integer constants. Things like serial identifier numbers, bit-masks, four-byte codes, etc.
For those purposes, enum
is great and you absolutely should use it. (Even better, use the NS_ENUM
and NS_OPTIONS
macros.) For other things, you must use something else; enum
does not do anything but integers.
I was thinking about importing the file in the Reddit-Prefix.pch file to make the constants available to all the files. Is it a good way of doing things?
Probably harmless, but probably excessive. Import your constants header(s) where you need them.
What are the use cases for each of those solutions?
#define
: Pretty limited. I'm honestly not sure there's a good reason to use this for constants anymore.const
: Best for local constants. Also, you have to use this for one you declared in a header and are now defining.static const
: Best for file-specific (or class-specific) constants.extern const
: You must use this when exporting a constant in a header.Also, if using
extern const
, do I need to import the file, or the constants will be available globally without importing the file?
You need to import the file, either in each file where you use it or in the prefix header.
Consider using FOUNDATION_EXPORT
for a bit more compatibility than extern
since it is defined in foundation and compiles to compatible formats for C, C++, and Win32.
As defined in NSObjCRuntime.h
#if defined(__cplusplus)
#define FOUNDATION_EXTERN extern "C"
#else
#define FOUNDATION_EXTERN extern
#endif
#if TARGET_OS_WIN32
#if defined(NSBUILDINGFOUNDATION)
#define FOUNDATION_EXPORT FOUNDATION_EXTERN __declspec(dllexport)
#else
#define FOUNDATION_EXPORT FOUNDATION_EXTERN __declspec(dllimport)
#endif
#define FOUNDATION_IMPORT FOUNDATION_EXTERN __declspec(dllimport)
#else
#define FOUNDATION_EXPORT FOUNDATION_EXTERN
#define FOUNDATION_IMPORT FOUNDATION_EXTERN
#endif
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