When converting an Objective-C program to a Objective-C ARC, I get the error:

"cast of Objective-C pointer type 'NSString *' to C pointer type 'CFStringRef' (aka 'const struct __CFString *') requires a bridged cast "

The code is as follows:

- (NSString *)_encodeString:(NSString *)string
{
    NSString *result = (NSString *)CFURLCreateStringByAddingPercentEscapes(NULL, 
                                   (CFStringRef)string, // this is line in error
                                   NULL, 
                                   (CFStringRef)@";/?:@&=$+{}<>,",
                                   kCFStringEncodingUTF8);
    return [result autorelease];
}

What is a bridged cast?

link|improve this question

67% accept rate
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 29 down vote accepted

Have a look at the ARC documentation on the LLVM website. You'll have to use __bridge or one of the other keywords.

This is because Core Foundation objects (CF*Refs) are not controlled by ARC, only Obj-C objects are. So when you convert between them, you have to tell ARC about the object's ownership so it can properly clean them up. The simplest case is a __bridge cast, for which ARC will not do any extra work (it assumes you handle the object's memory yourself).

link|improve this answer
Thanks, understand.. and the link ont he ARC Documentation was very helpful on the type of __bridge cast to use. – Michael Rowe Jul 17 '11 at 21:55
feedback

Here is a nice ARC tutorial that I found to be easier to understand than Apple's documentation that @jtbandes references.

Take a look at the section titled "Toll free bridging" in particular.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.