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NilObject's answer is a good start. Here's some supplemental info pertaining to manual memory management (required on the iPhone).

If you personally alloc/init an object, it comes with a reference count of 1. You are responsible for cleaning up after it when it's no longer needed, either by calling [foo release] or [foo autorelease]. release cleans it up right away, whereas autorelease adds the object to the autorelease pool, which will automatically release it at a later time.

autorelease is primarily for when you have a method that needs to return the object in question (so you can't manually release it, else you'll be returning a nil object) but you don't want to hold on to it, either.

If you acquire an object where you did not call alloc/init to get it -- for example:

foo = [NSString stringWithString:@"hello"];

but you want to hang on to this object, you need to call [foo retain]. Otherwise, it's possible it will get autoreleased and you'll be holding on to a nil reference (as it would in the above stringWithString example). When you no longer need it, call [foo release].

show/hide this revision's text 1

NilObject's answer is a good start. Here's some supplemental info pertaining to manual memory management (required on the iPhone).

If you personally alloc/init an object, it comes with a reference count of 1. You are responsible for cleaning up after it when it's no longer needed, either by calling [foo release] or [foo autorelease]. release cleans it up right away, whereas autorelease adds the object to the autorelease pool, which will automatically release it at a later time.

autorelease is primarily for when you have a method that needs to return the object in question (so you can't manually release it, else you'll be returning a nil object) but you don't want to hold on to it, either.

If you acquire an object where you did not call alloc/init to get it -- for example:

foo = [NSString stringWithString:@"hello"];

but you want to hang on to this object, you need to call [foo retain]. When you no longer need it, call [foo release].