I've run into this problem a couple of times and want to know the correct approach to take.
For an example, let's say I'm writing an iPhone app and I want a custom alert view class that uses blocks.
So I write the class, then later on in my code I go:
MyAlertView *alert = [MyAlertView alertWithBlahBlahBlah...];
[alert addButton:@"button" withBlock:^{ ... }];
[alert show];
Somewhere in the alert view class, we have
- (void)addButton:(NSString *)button withBlock:(void (^))block {
[_blocks setObject:[block copy] forKey:button];
}
- (void)show {
... drawing stuff ...
UIButton *button = ...
[button addTarget:self selector:@selector(buttonPressed:) ...];
...
}
- (void)buttonPressed:(id)sender {
((void (^)())[_blocks objectForKey:[sender title]])();
}
So, the alert view now shows up just fine. The problem is, if I tap a button, it attempts to send the buttonPressed:
selector to the MyAlertView
object that was displayed. The MyAlertView
has, however, been removed from the superview at this time. ARC decides that because the alert view is not owned by anyone anymore, it should be deallocated, not knowing that a button needs to message it in the future. This causes a crash when the button is tapped.
What's the right way to keep the alert view in memory? I could make the MyAlertView
object a property of the class that's using it, but that's kind of silly (what if I want to show two alerts at once?).
UIAlertView
button is pressed, it sends the delegate messages before it is removed from its superview, which then deallocates it unless you have a reference to it stored away somewhere.