In order to understand this, it's probably important to understand the way an object is stored during runtime. There is a class object1, which holds all the method implementations, and separately, there is a structure with the storage for the instance's variables. All instances of a class share the one class object.
When you call a method on an instance, the compiler turns that into a call to objc_msgSend
; the method implementation is looked up in the class object, and then run with the instance as an argument.
A reference to super
takes effect at compile time, not run time. When you write [super someMethod]
, the compiler turns that into a call to objc_msgSendSuper
instead of the usual objc_msgSend
. This starts looking for the method implementation in the superclass's class object, rather than the instance's class object.2
A category simply adds methods to the class object; it has little or no relation to subclassing.
Given all that, if you refer to super
inside of a category, it does indeed do the same thing that it would inside of a class -- the method implementation is looked up on the class object of the superclass, and then run with that instance as an argument.
Itai's post answers the question more directly, but in code:
@interface Sooper : NSObject {}
- (void) meth;
@end
@interface Sooper ()
- (void) catMeth;
@end
@interface Subb : Sooper {}
- (void) subbMeth;
@end
@interface Subb ()
- (void) catSubbMeth;
@end
@implementation Sooper
- (void) meth {
[super doIt]; // Looks up doIt in NSObject class object
}
- (void) catMeth {
[super doIt]; // Looks up doIt in NSObject class object
}
@end
@implementation Subb
- (void) subbMeth {
[super doIt]; // Looks up doIt in Sooper class object
}
- (void) catSubbMeth {
[super doIt]; // Looks up doIt in Sooper class object
}
@end
1 See Greg Parker's writeup [objc explain]: Classes and meta-classes
2One important thing to note is that the method doesn't get called on an instance of the superclass. This is where that separation of methods and data comes in. The method still gets called on the same instance in which [super someMethod]
was written, i.e., an instance of the subclass, using that instance's data; it just uses the superclass's implementation of the method.
So a call to [super class]
goes to the superclass object, finds the implementation of the method named class
, and calls it on the instance, transforming it into the equivalent of [self theSuperclassImplementationOfTheMethodNamedClass]
. Since all that method does is return the class of the instance on which it was called, you don't get the superclass's class, you get the class of self
. Due to that, calling class
is kind of a poor test of this phenomenon.
This whole answer completely ignores the message-passing/method call distinction. This is an important feature of ObjC, but I think that it would probably just muddy an already awkward explanation.