MacBook, iMac, iPhone, Mac OS X (10.6.4) Posted on Oct 22, 2010 3:53 PM Reply I have this question too ( 4 ) I have this question too Me too (4) Me too.
Overview
For much of your time developing with Xamarin.Mac, you can think, read, and write in C# without much concern with the underlying Objective-C APIs. However, sometimes you’ll need to read the API documentation from Apple, translate an answer from Stack Overflow to a solution for your problem, or compare to an existing sample.
Reading enough Objective-C to be dangerous
Sometimes it will be necessary to read an Objective-C definition or method call and translate that to the equivalent C# method. Let’s take a look at an Objective-C function definition and break down the pieces. This method (a selector in Objective-C) can be found on
NSTableView :
The declaration can be read left to right:
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This selector invocation can be read the same way:
Finding the C# member for a given selector
Now that you’ve found the Objective-C selector you need to invoke, the next step is mapping that to the equivalent C# member. There are four approaches you can try (continuing with the
NSTableView CanDragRows example):
What's everyone saying?Ethan Marcotte
“I couldn’t use Twitter without Twitterrific.”
Ethan Marcotte — @beep
John Siracusa![]()
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R.C. Rains — @shadowbottle
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