I am developing exclusively for iOS 5 using ARC. Should IBOutlets to UIViews (and subclasses) be strong or weak?

The following:

@property (nonatomic, weak) IBOutlet UIButton *button;

Would get rid of all of this:

- (void)viewDidUnload
{
    // ...
    self.button = nil;
    // ...
}

Are there any problems doing this? The templates are using strong as are the automatically generated properties created when connecting directly to the header from the 'Interface Builder' editor, but why? The UIViewController already has a strong reference to its view which retains its subviews.

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3 Answers

up vote 59 down vote accepted
+50

Summarized from the developer library:

From a practical perspective, in iOS and OS X outlets should be defined as declared properties. Outlets should generally be weak, except for those from File’s Owner to top-level objects in a nib file (or, in iOS, a storyboard scene) which should be strong. Outlets that you create will therefore typically be weak by default, because:

  • Outlets that you create to, for example, subviews of a view controller’s view or a window controller’s window, are arbitrary references between objects that do not imply ownership.

  • The strong outlets are frequently specified by framework classes (for example, UIViewController’s view outlet, or NSWindowController’s window outlet).

    @property (weak) IBOutlet MyView *viewContainerSubview;
    @property (strong) IBOutlet MyOtherClass *topLevelObject;
    
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How did you get the "developer library" link to jump to the particular part of the apple doc page? Whenever I link to the apple docs it always links to the top of the page (even if the content of interest is halfway down the page). Thanks. – bearMountain Dec 1 '11 at 17:12
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I copied the link from the navigation pane on the left. :D – Alexsander Akers Dec 1 '11 at 18:22
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What does "except for those from File’s Owner to top-level objects in a nib file (or, in iOS, a storyboard scene)" mean? – Van Du Tran Mar 9 at 15:55
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@VanDuTran - it means objects in the NIB that are at the root level, i.e. say you instantiated another view in there which isn't directly a subview of the main view, then it needs to have a strong reference. – mattjgalloway Mar 25 at 16:59
Yes, but you haven't directly answered the question. – iamthepiguy Apr 23 at 7:37
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I don't see any problem with that. Pre-ARC, I've always made my IBOutlets assign, as they're already retained by their superviews. If you make them weak, you shouldn't have to nil them out in viewDidUnload, as you point out.

One caveat: You can support iOS 4.x in an ARC project, but if you do, you can't use weak, so you'd have to make them assign, in which case you'd still want to nil the reference in viewDidUnload to avoid a dangling pointer. Here's an example of a dangling pointer bug I've experienced:

A UIViewController has a UITextField for zip code. It uses CLLocationManager to reverse geocode the user's location and set the zip code. Here's the delegate callback:

-(void)locationManager:(CLLocationManager *)manager
   didUpdateToLocation:(CLLocation *)newLocation
          fromLocation:(CLLocation *)oldLocation {
    Class geocoderClass = NSClassFromString(@"CLGeocoder");
    if (geocoderClass && IsEmpty(self.zip.text)) {
        id geocoder = [[geocoderClass alloc] init];
        [geocoder reverseGeocodeLocation:newLocation completionHandler:^(NSArray *placemarks, NSError *error) {
            if (self.zip && IsEmpty(self.zip.text)) {
                self.zip.text = [[placemarks objectAtIndex:0] postalCode];
            }
        }];    
    }
    [self.locationManager stopUpdatingLocation];
}

I found that if I dismissed this view at the right time and didn't nil self.zip in viewDidUnload, the delegate callback could throw a bad access exception on self.zip.text.

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It is also my understanding that weak properties do not need to be nilled in viewDidUnload. But why does Apple’s template for creating outlets include a [self setMySubview:nil]? – Yang Jan 24 at 8:20
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In iOS development NIB loading is a little bit different from Mac development.

In Mac development an IBOutlet is usually a weak reference: if you have a subclass of NSViewController only the top-level view will be retained and when you dealloc the controller all its subviews and outlets are freed automatically.

UiViewController use Key Value Coding to set the outlets using strong references. So when you dealloc your UIViewController, the top view will automatically deallocated, but you must also deallocate all its outlets in the dealloc method.

In this post from the Big Nerd Ranch, they cover this topic and also explain why using a strong reference in IBOutlet is not a good choice (even if it is recommended by Apple in this case).

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+1 for Big Nerd Ranch post. It explains the situation perfectly – Ashley Mills May 17 at 10:37
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