2

In my child view controller, I have a property defined as:

@property (nonatomic, copy) NSString *name;

In view controller A, the Parent, I have the following:

NSString *temp = currency.name; //This is because currency is a Core Data Managed Object.
                                //I wanted to make sure it wasn't a confounding factor.

childViewController.name = temp;

if(childViewController.name == temp)
  NSLog(@"I am surprised");

The problem is that if statement finds equivalency and the "I am surprised" is printed. I thought that == should be checking if they're the same object, and that the use of copy in the property declaration should ensure the setter is making a copy. I checked in the debugger and they are both pointing to the same string. (Which I believe is immutable, which may be why this is happening?)

The same thing happens even if I write childViewController.name = [temp copy];, which I find shocking!

Can anyone explain what is going on here?

Edit: I removed a bit here on worrying about a circular reference which I realized wasn't a concern.

1 Answer 1

0

This is an optimization.

For immutable objects, it's superfluous to create an actual copy, so - copy is often implemented as a simple retain, i. e.

- (id)copy
{
    [self retain];
    return self;
}

Try assigning a mutable object (e. g. NSMutableString) to the property, and you will get the "expected" behavior.

4
  • This is what makes learning the behavior of == so confusing when you start out with strings...
    – El Tea
    Oct 28, 2013 at 5:46
  • @ElTea I don't see the relation to either the "behavior of ==" or strings in general. This is an optimization related to immutability, that's all. == works just as it would work in any other case.
    – user529758
    Oct 28, 2013 at 5:48
  • My point was that if you were starting out and make the == error on comparing strings, it might seem to work for a while because the strings will often be the same. At any rate, you totally nailed it, making the temp string a NSMutableString forced two different addresses. Thanks much.
    – El Tea
    Oct 28, 2013 at 5:50
  • @ElTea Oh well, yes. That's why one should take the use of isEqual: or isEqualToString: seriously :)
    – user529758
    Oct 28, 2013 at 5:51

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