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I've been using enumerateObjectsUsingBlock: a lot lately for my fast-enumeration needs, and I'm having a hard time understanding the usage of BOOL *stop in the enumeration block.

The NSArray class reference states

stop: A reference to a Boolean value. The block can set the value to YES to stop further processing of the array. The stop argument is an out-only argument. You should only ever set this Boolean to YES within the Block.

So then of course I can add the following in my block to stop the enumeration:

if (idx == [myArray indexOfObject:[myArray lastObject]]) {
    *stop = YES;
}

From what I've been able to tell, not explicitly setting *stop to YES doesn't have any negative side effects. The enumeration seems to automatically stop itself at the end of the array. So is using *stop really necessary in a block?

1 Answer 1

158

The stop argument to the Block allows you to stop the enumeration prematurely. It's the equivalent of break from a normal for loop. You can ignore it if you want to go through every object in the array.

for( id obj in arr ){
    if( [obj isContagious] ){
        break;    // Stop enumerating
    }

    if( ![obj isKindOfClass:[Perefrigia class]] ){
        continue;    // Skip this object
    }

    [obj immanetizeTheEschaton];
}

[arr enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:^(id obj, NSUInteger idx, BOOL *stop) {
    if( [obj isContagious] ){
        *stop = YES;    // Stop enumerating
        return;
    }

    if( ![obj isKindOfClass:[Perefrigia class]] ){
        return;    // Skip this object
    }

    [obj immanentizeTheEschaton];
}];

That is an out parameter because it is a reference to a variable from the calling scope. It needs to be set inside your Block, but read inside of enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:, the same way NSErrors are commonly passed back to your code from framework calls.

- (void)enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:(void (^)(id obj, NSUInteger idx, BOOL *stop))block {
    // N.B: This is probably not how this method is actually implemented!
    // It is just to demonstrate how the out parameter operates!

    NSUInteger idx = 0;
    for( id obj in self ){

        BOOL stop = NO;

        block(obj, idx++, &stop);

        if( stop ){
            break;
        }
    }
}
3
  • 21
    Note that the stop flag is advisory; the enumeration may continue for some undefined number of iterations in the concurrent case, for example. I.e. you shouldn't set an __block variable unconditionally on each pass through the enumeration and expect it to be the "last" value when using stop to early terminate. You should always couple the "no, use this object" with setting stop = YES;.
    – bbum
    Sep 10, 2012 at 19:31
  • @bbum, can you clarify whether the continuing behavior applies only to concurrent enumeration? While it's perfectly understandable in that case, it isn't documented, and would be quite a surprising bite in the ass for "serial" enumeration.
    – jscs
    Sep 17, 2013 at 7:43
  • 4
    <rdar://problem/15015199> now asks for clarification as the documentation doesn't say either way and it should.
    – bbum
    Sep 17, 2013 at 23:29

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