@Shaharyar which is why the App delegate receives the notification. The simple rule is that if the class posts a notification, the delegate handles the notification with a function name that you get by removing the initial UI, the final Notification, and lowercasing the first word.
So UIApplicationDidEnterBackgroundNotification is handled by applicationDidEnterBackground in it's delegate. But that means that there as a notification posted with that name.
@Shaharyar so to answer you question - Yes it is the right way to register for the notification, but you don't need to generate the notification yourself.
@Shaharyar I'm not sure what you are trying to do? you call super init as usual, this sets up the property, and then your specific initializer can set the property up how you want.
@Shaharyar But, it depends on the property. If it's readonly, and you can't see what the implementation of the setter is, then redeclaring the property in your subclass could cause unforseen consequences.
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