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There are some functions which take as an argument @selector(methodName). I used NSLog to find out what @selector is, and it returns an integer. It looks like a PID, but when I ran ps ax that PID could not be found. What does that integer represent and why do we have to use @selector all the time instead of just passing the method name?

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@selector() is a compiler directive to turn whatever's inside the parenthesis into a SEL. A SEL is a type to indicate a method name, but not the method implementation. (For that you'd need a different type, probably an IMP or a Method) Under-the-hood, a SEL is implemented as a char*, although relying on that behavior is not a good idea. If you want to inspect what SEL you have, the best way to do it is to turn it into an NSString* like this:

NSLog(@"the current method is: %@", NSStringFromSelector(_cmd));

(Assuming you know that _cmd is one of the hidden parameters of every method call, and is the SEL that corresponds to the current method)

The Objective-C Programming Language Guide has much more information on the subject.


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