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libs/protobuf/objectivec/README.md
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libs/protobuf/objectivec/README.md
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Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format
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===================================================
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Copyright 2008 Google Inc.
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This directory contains the Objective C Protocol Buffers runtime library.
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Requirements
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------------
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The Objective C implementation requires:
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- Objective C 2.0 Runtime (32bit & 64bit iOS, 64bit OS X).
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- Xcode 13.3.1 (or later).
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- The library code does *not* use ARC (for performance reasons), but it all can
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be called from ARC code.
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Installation
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------------
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The distribution pulled from github includes the sources for both the
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compiler (protoc) and the runtime (this directory). After cloning the distribution
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and needed submodules ([see the src directory's README](../src/README.md)),
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to build the compiler and run the runtime tests, you can use:
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$ objectivec/DevTools/full_mac_build.sh
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This will generate the `protoc` binary.
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Building
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--------
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There are two ways to include the Runtime sources in your project:
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Add `objectivec/*.h`, `objectivec/google/protobuf/*.pbobjc.h`, and
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`objectivec/GPBProtocolBuffers.m` to your project.
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*or*
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Add `objectivec/*.h`, `objectivec/google/protobuf/*.pbobjc.h`,
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`objectivec/google/protobuf/*.pbobjc.m`, and `objectivec/*.m` except for
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`objectivec/GPBProtocolBuffers.m` to your project.
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If the target is using ARC, remember to turn off ARC (`-fno-objc-arc`) for the
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`.m` files.
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The files generated by `protoc` for the `*.proto` files (`*.pbobjc.h` and
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`*.pbobjc.m`) are then also added to the target.
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Usage
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-----
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The objects generated for messages should work like any other Objective C
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object. They are mutable objects, but if you don't change them, they are safe
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to share between threads (similar to passing an NSMutableDictionary between
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threads/queues; as long as no one mutates it, things are fine).
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There are a few behaviors worth calling out:
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A property that is type NSString\* will never return nil. If the value is
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unset, it will return an empty string (@""). This is inpart to align things
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with the Protocol Buffers spec which says the default for strings is an empty
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string, but also so you can always safely pass them to isEqual:/compare:, etc.
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and have deterministic results.
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A property that is type NSData\* also won't return nil, it will return an empty
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data ([NSData data]). The reasoning is the same as for NSString not returning
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nil.
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A property that is another GPBMessage class also will not return nil. If the
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field wasn't already set, you will get a instance of the correct class. This
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instance will be a temporary instance unless you mutate it, at which point it
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will be attached to its parent object. We call this pattern *autocreators*.
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Similar to NSString and NSData properties it makes things a little safer when
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using them with isEqual:/etc.; but more importantly, this allows you to write
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code that uses Objective C's property dot notation to walk into nested objects
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and access and/or assign things without having to check that they are not nil
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and create them each step along the way. You can write this:
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```
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- (void)updateRecord:(MyMessage *)msg {
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...
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// Note: You don't have to check subMessage and otherMessage for nil and
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// alloc/init/assign them back along the way.
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msg.subMessage.otherMessage.lastName = @"Smith";
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...
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}
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```
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If you want to check if a GPBMessage property is present, there is always as
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`has\[NAME\]` property to go with the main property to check if it is set.
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A property that is of an Array or Dictionary type also provides *autocreator*
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behavior and will never return nil. This provides all the same benefits you
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see for the message properties. Again, you can write:
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```
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- (void)updateRecord:(MyMessage *)msg {
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...
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// Note: Just like above, you don't have to check subMessage and otherMessage
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// for nil and alloc/init/assign them back along the way. You also don't have
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// to create the siblingsArray, you can safely just append to it.
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[msg.subMessage.otherMessage.siblingsArray addObject:@"Pat"];
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...
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}
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```
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If you are inspecting a message you got from some other place (server, disk,
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etc), you may want to check if the Array or Dictionary has entries without
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causing it to be created for you. For this, there is always a `\[NAME\]_Count`
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property also provided that can return zero or the real count, but won't trigger
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the creation.
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For primitive type fields (ints, floats, bools, enum) in messages defined in a
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`.proto` file that use *proto2* syntax there are conceptual differences between
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having an *explicit* and *default* value. You can always get the value of the
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property. In the case that it hasn't been set you will get the default. In
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cases where you need to know whether it was set explicitly or you are just
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getting the default, you can use the `has\[NAME\]` property. If the value has
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been set, and you want to clear it, you can set the `has\[NAME\]` to `NO`.
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*proto3* syntax messages do away with this concept, thus the default values are
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never included when the message is encoded.
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The Objective C classes/enums can be used from Swift code.
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Objective C Generator Proto File Options
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----------------------------------------
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**objc_class_prefix=\<prefix\>** (no default)
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This options allow you to provide a custom prefix for all the symbols generated
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from a proto file (classes (from message), enums, the Root for extension
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support).
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If not set, the generation options `package_to_prefix_mappings_path` and
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`use_package_as_prefix` (documented below) controls what is used instead. Since
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Objective C uses a global namespace for all of its classes, there can be collisions.
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`use_package_as_prefix=yes` should avoid collisions since proto package are used to
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scope/name things in other languages, but this option can be used to get shorter
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names instead. Convention is to base the explicit prefix on the proto package.
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Objective C Generator `protoc` Options
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--------------------------------------
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When generating Objective C code, `protoc` supports a `--objc_opt` argument; the
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argument is comma-delimited name/value pairs (_key=value,key2=value2_). The
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_keys_ are used to change the behavior during generation. The currently
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supported keys are:
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* `generate_for_named_framework`: The `value` used for this key will be used
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when generating the `#import` statements in the generated code. Instead
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of being plain `#import "some/path/file.pbobjc.h"` lines, they will be
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framework based, i.e. - `#import <VALUE/file.pbobjc.h>`.
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_NOTE:_ If this is used with `named_framework_to_proto_path_mappings_path`,
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then this is effectively the _default_ to use for everything that wasn't
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mapped by the other.
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* `named_framework_to_proto_path_mappings_path`: The `value` used for this key
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is a path to a file containing the listing of framework names and proto
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files. The generator uses this to decide if another proto file referenced
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should use a framework style import vs. a user level import
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(`#import <FRAMEWORK/file.pbobjc.h>` vs `#import "dir/file.pbobjc.h"`).
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The format of the file is:
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* An entry is a line of `frameworkName: file.proto, dir/file2.proto`.
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* Comments start with `#`.
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* A comment can go on a line after an entry.
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(i.e. - `frameworkName: file.proto # comment`)
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Any number of files can be listed for a framework, just separate them with
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commas.
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There can be multiple lines listing the same frameworkName in case it has a
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lot of proto files included in it; and having multiple lines makes things
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easier to read.
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* `runtime_import_prefix`: The `value` used for this key to be used as a
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prefix on `#import`s of runtime provided headers in the generated files.
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When integrating ObjC protos into a build system, this can be used to avoid
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having to add the runtime directory to the header search path since the
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generate `#import` will be more complete.
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* `package_to_prefix_mappings_path`: The `value` used for this key is a
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path to a file containing a list of proto packages and prefixes.
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The generator will use this to locate which ObjC class prefix to use when
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generating sources _unless_ the `objc_class_prefix` file option is set.
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This option can be useful if multiple apps consume a common set of
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proto files but wish to use a different prefix for the generated sources
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between them. This option takes precedent over the `use_package_as_prefix`
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option.
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The format of the file is:
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* An entry is a line of "package=prefix".
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* Comments start with `#`.
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* A comment can go on a line after a expected package/prefix pair.
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(i.e. - "package=prefix # comment")
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* For files that do NOT have a proto package (not recommended), an
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entry can be made as "no_package:PATH=prefix", where PATH is the
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path for the .proto file.
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* `use_package_as_prefix`, `package_as_prefix_forced_prefix` and
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`proto_package_prefix_exceptions_path`: The `value` for
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`use_package_as_prefix` can be `yes` or `no`, and indicates if a prefix
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should be derived from the proto package for all the symbols for files that
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don't have the `objc_class_prefix` file option (mentioned above). This helps
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ensure the symbols are more unique and means there is less chance of ObjC
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class name collisions.
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To help in migrating code to using this support,
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`proto_package_prefix_exceptions_path` can be used to provide the path
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to a file that contains proto package names (one per line, comments allowed
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if prefixed with `#`). These package won't get the derived prefix, allowing
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migrations to the behavior one proto package at a time across a code base.
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`package_as_prefix_forced_prefix` can be used to provide a value that will
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be used before all prefixes derived from the packages to help group all of
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these types with a common prefix. Thus it only makes sense to use it when
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`use_package_as_prefix` is also enabled. For example, setting this to
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"XYZ\_" and generating a file with the package "something" defining
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"MyMessage", would have Objective-C class be `XYZ_Something_MyMessage`.
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`use_package_as_prefix` currently defaults to `no` (existing behavior), but
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that could change in the future as it helps avoid collisions when more
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protos get added to the build. Note that this would be a breaking change.
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* `headers_use_forward_declarations`: The `value` for this can be `yes` or
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`no`, and indicates if the generated headers use forward declarations for
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Message and Enum types from other .proto files or if the files should be
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imported into the generated header instead.
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By using forward declarations, less code is likely to recompile when the
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files do change, but Swift generally doesn't like forward declarations and
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will fail to include properties when the concrete definition of the type is
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known at import time. If your proto usages span modules, this can be a
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problem.
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`headers_use_forward_declarations` currently defaults to `yes` (existing
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behavior), but in a future release, that default may change to provide
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better Swift support by default.
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Contributing
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------------
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Please make updates to the tests along with changes. If just changing the
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runtime, the Xcode projects can be used to build and run tests. If your change
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also requires changes to the generated code,
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`objectivec/DevTools/full_mac_build.sh` can be used to easily rebuild and test
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changes. Passing `-h` to the script will show the addition options that could
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be useful.
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Documentation
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-------------
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The complete documentation for Protocol Buffers is available via the
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web at:
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https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/
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