1

I'm having trouble with a snippet of code. I'm trying to add an instance of CLLocationCoordinate2D to a NSMutable array using the addObject method, but whenever the line is executed, my app crashes. Is there anything obvious wrong with this code?

The crash is on this line:

[points addObject:(id)new_coordinate];

Polygon.m:

#import "Polygon.h"

@implementation Polygon
@synthesize points;

- (id)init {
    self = [super init];
    if(self) {
        points = [[NSMutableArray alloc] init];
    }
    return self;
}


-(void)addPointLatitude:(double)latitude Longitude:(double)longitude {
    NSLog(@"Adding Coordinate: [%f, %f] %d", latitude, longitude, [points count]);
    CLLocationCoordinate2D* new_coordinate = malloc(sizeof(CLLocationCoordinate2D));
    new_coordinate->latitude = latitude;
    new_coordinate->longitude = longitude;
    [points addObject:(id)new_coordinate];
    NSLog(@"%d", [points count]);
}


-(bool)pointInPolygon:(CLLocationCoordinate2D*) p {
    return true;
}


-(CLLocationCoordinate2D*) getNEBounds {
    ...
}

-(CLLocationCoordinate2D*) getSWBounds {
    ...
}


-(void) dealloc {
    for(int count = 0; count < [points count]; count++) {
        free([points objectAtIndex:count]);
    }

    [points release];
    [super dealloc];
}

@end
1
  • There is no need to malloc this at all. You should just use a variable on the stack to create and initialize your CLLocationCoordinate2D struct and then wrap it in an NSValue object (see subw's response below). When the NSValue object is removed from the array, its memory will be released properly. When your stack variable goes out of scope, its memory will also be reclaimed.
    – Jason Coco
    Sep 8, 2009 at 17:30

3 Answers 3

6

You can only add NSObject-derived objects to an array. You should encapsulate the data inside a proper object (for example NSData).

For example:

CLLocationCoordinate2D* new_coordinate = malloc(sizeof(CLLocationCoordinate2D));
    new_coordinate->latitude = latitude;
    new_coordinate->longitude = longitude;
    [points addObject:[NSData dataWithBytes:(void *)new_coordinate length:sizeof(CLLocationCoordinate2D)]];
    free(new_coordinate);

retrieving the object:

CLLocationCoordinate2D* c = (CLLocationCoordinate2D*) [[points objectAtIndex:0] bytes];
3
  • 1
    To be precise, you can add objects that conform to the NSObject protocol to an NSArray. Not all objects that meet that requirement are derived from NSObject. Sep 8, 2009 at 11:41
  • The nice thing about putting the bytes in an NSData is that the NSData will claim ownership of the malloc'd block and free it when the NSData object itself is released (unless you use dataWithBytesNoCopy:). Sep 8, 2009 at 15:37
  • It is much better to use a stack variable here and NSValue than using NSData and pointers. His example is just leaking memory anyway.
    – Jason Coco
    Sep 8, 2009 at 17:31
2

The proper way to do this is to encapsulate the data inside a NSValue, which is specifically for putting C types in NSArrays and other collections.

0

You can use the CFArrayCreateMutable function with custom callbacks to create a mutable array that doesn't retain/release.

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