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I'm trying to figure out the weakself/strongself reference for nested blocks

What are the difference between:

__weak __typeof__(self) weakSelf = self;

[self.networkCall_1 completionHandler:^(id response) {
    if(response) {
        [weakSelf.networkCall_2 completionHandler:^(id response2) {

        }];
    }
}];

and:

__weak __typeof__(self) weakSelf = self;

[self.networkCall_1 completionHandler:^(id response) {
    __typeof__(self) strongSelf = weakSelf;
    if(response) {
        [strongSelf.networkCall_2 completionHandler:^(id response2) {

        }];
    }
}];

My understanding is that if we're not using strongSelf within the inner block, the self might gets deallocated, thus networkCall_2 might be nil, and never called. If that's the case, if I don't care if networkCall_2 finishes, I can just use weakSelf ? Also, what happens if networkCall_2 is running, and self gets deallocated? Does it finish or terminate the call? Thank you!

1 Answer 1

2

(@trungduc was close to an answer but unfortunately has decided to delete it. So now as I may have inadvertently helped lose you your only answer to date I'll see if I can help you out.)

This answer only applies when using ARC

What are the difference between:

The probably surprising answer is that in this particular example not a lot...

When Objective-C makes a method call on an object it ensures that the object is alive across the call. So in the call:

[weakSelf.networkCall_2 completionHandler:^(id response2) {...}];

which is shorthand (using dot notation) for:

[[weakSelf networkCall_2] completionHandler:^(id response2) {...}];

First weakSelf is loaded and a strong reference held to the result, call this reference A. Then the property (method) networkCall_2 is called on A and a strong reference held to its result, call this B. At this point the compiler is free to drop the strong reference A as it is not used passed this point. Finally the call to the method completionHandler: on B is called. After that returns, which may be before the passed completion block has been invoked, the compiler is free to drop the strong reference B.

If A or B is nil above then the calls on them simply return nil and nothing much happens.

Note: your code is a little unusual, more common might be something like:

[weakSelf networkCall_2:<some argument> completionHandler:^(id response2) {...}];

that is networkCall_2:completionHandler: is a method on the object referenced by weakSelf. If this is what your actual code looks like then the above still applies and the compiler will hold a strong reference across the call to whatever weakSelf references.

Turning now to:

__typeof__(self) strongSelf = weakSelf;
if(response) {
    [strongSelf.networkCall_2 completionHandler:^(id response2) {...}];

The compiler first loads weakSelf and holds a strong reference to it in strongSelf. Then the property (method) networkCall_2 is called on strongSelf and a strong reference held to its result, call this B. At this point the compiler is free to drop the strong reference strongSelf as it is not used passed this point. Etc.

(Note: "free to drop" in both cases above does not mean the compiler will immediately drop it, it may defer that until the end of the if or block.)

Notice the similarity in the two descriptions? In this particular example there is really no difference between using weakSelf and strongSelf. So why does some code use the strongSelf pattern? Consider:

__typeof__(self) strongSelf = weakSelf;
if (strongSelf) // object still exists)
{
   // *all* three methods will be called
   [strongSelf method1];
   [strongSelf method2];
   [strongSelf method3];
}

vs:

[weakSelf method1]; // call method1 if weakSelf is not nil
[weakSelf method2]; // call method2 if weakSelf is *still* not nil
[weakSelf method3]; // call method3 if weakSelf is *still* not nil

Using the strongSelf pattern above ensures that either 0 (if weakSelf is nil) or 3 method calls are made. If the weakSelf pattern is used 0, 1, 2 or 3 methods may be called.

Your particular example has the same result either way as there is only one use of strongSelf/weakSelf, in the above the result can differ as there are multiple uses of strongSelf/weakSelf.

Which leaves us with your question:

Also, what happens if networkCall_2 is running, and self gets deallocated? Does it finish or terminate the call?

This question reads as though networkCall_2 is a method not a property, see the note above, we'll cover both cases:

  1. If here you are referring to the self of the method networkCall_2 then as covered above Objective-C will keep a strong reference across the call to any object a method is invoked on, so self cannot be deallocated during a call. So an active call is never terminated due to its self disappearing.

  2. If your networkCall_2 is indeed a property as shown then the object referenced by weakSelf (the A above) will not be deallocated across the property call, as in (1). However when then calling the completionHandler: method on whatever object the property call returned (the B above) then A could be deallocated across that call (unless that call holds a strong reference to A by other means).

Hope I understood your question correctly and if so I think your answer boils down to knowing:

An object on which a method (or property) is called will not be deallocated during that method (or property) call.

HTH

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  • Sorry for deleting my answer. I'm confused with your questions and 40k reputations. It makes me not sure about my knowledge. Luckily, now we have a better answer. Thanks for the answer. I'm learned a lot from it.
    – trungduc
    Dec 14, 2017 at 9:41
  • @trungduc - no apology required and it's nice to know this answer helped you as well.
    – CRD
    Dec 14, 2017 at 9:48
  • I have one question. Do we have any official document about An object on which a method (or property) is called will not be deallocated during that method (or property) call ? I tried but i can't find it.
    – trungduc
    Dec 14, 2017 at 9:58
  • @trungduc – One of ARC's roles is to ensure that referenced objects that are required stay around. In a method call the passed arguments are required (ignoring any special cases), and the object a method is called on is an implicit argument to the method – it is what is assigned to the implicit parameter self. [cont in next comment]
    – CRD
    Dec 14, 2017 at 19:19
  • For the uses of weakSelf above we can further turn to the 4.2 Semantics of the Clang ARC does where we find under Reading, 1st bullet: "For __weak objects, the current pointee is retained and then released at the end of the current full-expression." So weakSelf is loaded and retained across the call ("full-expression"). This restriction to the scope of the retain is why [weakSelf method1]; ... [weakSelf method3] above does three seperate load/retain/releases, and the need for the strongSelf pattern. HTH
    – CRD
    Dec 14, 2017 at 19:23

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