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So here is what I am trying to do

@implementation someHelper

+(BOOL) GetInfo:(NSData **)info1, (NSString**) info2
{
   __block _Bool out = NO;

    //do stuff to get input

    [[Bool result] startSession:input callsBack:^(Abc obj, Bool status)
    {
        if(status)
        {
            *info1 = [obj.Data1 subdataWithRange:NSMakeRange(0,2);
            *info2 = obj.string1;
            out = true;
        }
        else
        out = false;
   }];
   return out
}

Calling looks something like

NSString *a;
NSData   *b;
output = [someHelper GetInfo:(NSData **)&a (NSString **)&b];

I think the thing I am missing here is the actual memory allocation for info1 and info2. I am very new to Obj C and it is not clear to me what I need to do for proper allocation.

When I try with

 NSMutableData *info1 = [NSMutableData dataWithCapacity: 2];
 *info1 = [obj.Data1 subdataWithRange:NSMakeRange(0,2);

I get Assigning to NSMutableData from incompatible type NSData.

Can someone please help me understand this better and how I can fix the issues?

1 Answer 1

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More likely than not startSession:callsBack: is an asynchronous method that returns immediately. In the callback block, you should pass the string and data off to whatever is interested in the updated values.

Given how far from the Objective-C standard your naming conventions and coding patterns are, I would suggest also taking a refresher on how to use Objective-C.

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  • Other than NSError, what other foundation types get dereferenced in typical code? Hardly any. I don't understand why there'd be any reason to pass NSData by reference here.
    – stevesliva
    Feb 26, 2016 at 20:14
  • @stevesliva Beyond no reason, it simply isn't going to work. Since startSession:callsBack: is (most likely) asynchronous, by the time the block executes, GetInfo has already returned and trying to set those inout parameters is utterly pointless.
    – bbum
    Feb 26, 2016 at 21:10

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