Lazy loading is not an UITabBarController task. Instead, it is responsability of your viewControllers associated with your Tab.
To release the UIView, associated with each UIViewControllers, every time you change the TabBarItem, you must implement the following method in each UIViewController subclass, associated with your UITabBarController.viewControllers property:
-(void)viewDidDisappear {
[self.view removeFromSuperview];
self.view = nil;
}
Obviously, this will remove the self.view associated with your UIViewController. However, if your code is smart enough, this will remove all the related objects.
For example, suppose that your loadView method is as follow:
-(void)loadView {
UIView *contentVew = [[UIView alloc] initWithFrame:[[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds]];
self.view = contentView;
…
...
UILabel *aLabel = [[UILabel alloc] initWithFrame:CGRectMake(0,0,320,50)];
…
…
[contentView addSubview:aLabel];
[aLabel release];
…
[contentView release];
}
This means that every object inside the contentView and their memory responsabilities are demanded to the contentView, that is released and attached to the self.view property.
In this scenario, removing the self.view (that's the reference to the contentView) resulting in a domino-style releasing of every object, that's your goal.
Best regards