You know in Cocoa there is this thing, for example you can create a UIView and do:
view.autoresizingMask = UIViewAutoresizingFlexibleWidth | UIViewAutoresizingFlexibleHeight; I have a custom UIView with multiple states, which I have defined in an enum like this:
enum DownloadViewStatus { FileNotDownloaded, FileDownloading, FileDownloaded }; For each created subview, I set its tag: subview1.tag = FileNotDownloaded;
Then, I have a custom setter for the view state which does the following:
for (UIView *subview in self.subviews) { if (subview.tag == viewStatus) subview.hidden = NO; else subview.hidden = YES; } But what I am trying to do, is to allow this:
subview1.tag = FileNotDownloaded | FileDownloaded; So my subview1 shows up in two states of my view. Currently, it doesn't show up in any of those two states since the | operator seems to add the two enum values.
Is there a way to do that?
Alternatively to assigning absolute values (1, 2, 4, …) you can declare bitmasks (how these are called) like this:
typedef enum : NSUInteger { FileNotDownloaded = (1 << 0), // => 00000001 FileDownloading = (1 << 1), // => 00000010 FileDownloaded = (1 << 2) // => 00000100 } DownloadViewStatus; or using modern ObjC's NS_OPTIONS/NS_ENUM macros:
typedef NS_OPTIONS(NSUInteger, DownloadViewStatus) { FileNotDownloaded = (1 << 0), // => 00000001 FileDownloading = (1 << 1), // => 00000010 FileDownloaded = (1 << 2) // => 00000100 }; (see Abizern's answer for more info on the latter)
The concept of bitmasks is to (usually) define each enum value with a single bit set.
Hence ORing two values does the following:
DownloadViewStatus status = FileNotDownloaded | FileDownloaded; // => 00000101 which is equivalent to:
00000001 // FileNotDownloaded | 00000100 // FileDownloaded ---------- = 00000101 // (FileNotDownloaded | FileDownloaded) One thing to keep in mind when checking against bitmasks:
Let's assume that status is initialized like this:
DownloadViewStatus status = FileNotDownloaded | FileDownloaded; // => 00000101 If you want to check if status equals FileNotDownloaded, you can use:
BOOL equals = (status == FileNotDownloaded); // => false which is equivalent to:
00000101 // (FileNotDownloaded | FileDownloaded) == 00000100 // FileDownloaded ----------- = 00000000 // false If you want to check if status merely contains FileNotDownloaded, you need to use:
BOOL contains = (status & FileNotDownloaded) != 0; // => true 00000101 // (FileNotDownloaded | FileDownloaded) & 00000100 // FileDownloaded ----------- = 00000100 // FileDownloaded != 00000000 // 0 ----------- = 00000001 // 1 => true See the subtle difference (and why your current "if"-expression is probably wrong)?
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