A protocol is the same thing as an interface in Java: it's essentially a contract that says, "Any class that implements this protocol will also implement these methods."
A category, on the other hand, just binds methods to a class. For example, in Cocoa, I can create a category for NSObject
that will allow me to add methods to the NSObject
class (and, of course, all subclasses), even though I don't really have access to NSObject
.
To summarize: a protocol specifies what methods a class will implement; a category adds methods to an existing class.
The proper use of each, then, should be clear: Use protocols to declare a set of methods that a class must implement, and use categories to add methods to an existing class.
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