An application that I am working on, that uses ARC
and needs to support iOS 4.3 and iOS 5, declares every outlet
as @property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet
in the .h
file.
e.g.
// myClass.h
@property (strong, nonatomic) IBOutlet UITextView *myTextview;
I know that with ARC
only properties which do not hold a strong
reference to an object are released.
As a result, the App relies on - (void)viewDidUnload
to set the property myTextview
to nil
.
i.e.
// myClass.m
- (void)viewDidUnload
{
[super viewDidUnload];
self.myTextview = nil;
}
I know, from Apple's Documentation, that Outlets
should generally be weak
except those from File's Owner ( i.e. A Runtime Object
that owns the contents of the iOS Storyboard scene) to Top-Level Objects
(my rule of thumb is to use anything that appears in the window with File's Owner, First Responder and View).
Anything I add to the view
will be a subview
and thus is retained
by it's direct superview
, meaning a weak
reference should be used.
I am also aware that - (void)viewDidUnload
is deprecated in iOS 6 and is not called.
1st Question : What are the issues with taking the approach of declaring every outlet as a strong
property and setting it to nil
in viewDidUnload
, apart from the fact that viewDidUnload
is deprecated in iOS 6?
My intuition tells me that it is because situations arise where you can set a pointer to nil
, before viewDidUnload
is called. So you should, to free up memory on the heap. Is there a noticable performance change if this is the case?
2nd Question : Should I go back throughout the project and change strong
to weak
? Why? Is it worth the time?
3rd Question : If I was to declare the property
in a class extension
, to 'hide' it, how does this affect my rule of thumb for deciding on when to use strong
or weak
.
I know there are many threads here that discuss this issue. But many I've found are out of date, and do not address this issue directly. Thanks.
viewDidUnload
is not only deprecated, it is not ever called. You should only implementviewDidUnload
if your app needs to support iOS 4.3 or iOS 5.