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Similar to Ben Gottlieb's question, I have a handful of deprecated calls that are bugging me. Is there a way to suppress warnings by line? For instance:

 if([[UIApplication sharedApplication]
  respondsToSelector:@selector(setStatusBarHidden:withAnimation:)]) {

  [[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES withAnimation:UIStatusBarAnimationSlide];
 } else {
  [[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES animated:NO]; //causes deprecation warning
 }

All I care about is that line. I don't want to turn off all deprecation warnings. I would also rather not do something like suppress specific warnings by file.

There have been a few other circumstances where I wanted to flag a specific line as okay even though the compiler generates a warning. I essentially want to let my team know that the problem has been handled and stop getting bugged about the same line over and over.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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Vincent Gable has posted an interesting solution. In short:

@protocol UIApplicationDeprecatedMethods
- (void)setStatusBarHidden:(BOOL)hidden animated:(BOOL)animated;
@end

if([[UIApplication sharedApplication] respondsToSelector:@selector(setStatusBarHidden:withAnimation:)]) {
    [[UIApplication sharedApplication] setStatusBarHidden:YES withAnimation:UIStatusBarAnimationSlide]; 
} else { 
    id<UIApplicationDeprecatedMethods> app = [UIApplication sharedApplication];
    [app setStatusBarHidden:YES animated:NO];
}

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
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