I have a Singleton object that manages all my lists. We'll call it ListStore.
ListStore has a mutable array, which stores Lists.
@interface ListStore : NSObject
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSMutableArray *lists; // an array of List objects
end
Lists has a mutable array, which stores Things.
@interface Wanderlist : NSObject <NSCoding, NSCopying>
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSMutableArray *things; // an array of Thing objects
@end
At any time, a background process might go through ListStore and loop through and process all Lists, while a user might be interacting with a List.
To guard against "object was mutated while being enumerated" type errors, I do this:
// all of this is in a background thread
NSArray *newLists = [[ListStore sharedStore] lists] copy];
for (List *list in newLists) {
// yay, no more crashes, because I'm enumerating over a copied object, so the user
// can do whatever they want while I'm here
for(Thing *thing in list.things) {
// oh crap, my copy and the original object both reference the same list.things,
// which is why i'm seeing the 'mutation while enumerating" errors still
...
}
}
I originally thought that because I made a copy into newLists
that all of its members would be properly copied. I now understand that not to be the case: I'm still seeing the "object was mutated while enumerated" errors, but this time it's happening on list.things
.
Can I use NSCopying with my setup so that when I say:
[[ListStore sharedStore] copy];
It calls copyWithZone:
on Lists
, so I can then copyWithZone:
on things
?
I tried to set it up like this but copyWithZone:
wasn't getting called.
I know I could simply say NSArray *newList = [list.things copy]
but I'd like to get a better understanding of NSCopying at the very least.