Maybe my memory has gone completely wacko, but I think I remember that declaring pointers without initializing them made them point to nil. But recently this doesn't seem to be the case. Has it always been this way? Or has it something to do with the compiler settings?
2 Answers
Instance variables of objects are initialized to nil
in alloc
(the whole object is bzeroed).
Edit: Also, global and static storage variables are initialized to zero (6.7.8 10 of the C99 Standard, thanks Derek for pointing that out).
Local stack variables are not initialized automatically. This did not change in known history.
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Actually, globals and static variables are always initialized. Oct 24, 2009 at 22:22
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Really? The following code runs without assertions, which suggests that they are initialized to
nil
upon declaration, but become non-nil when alloc is called:NSString* foo; assert(foo==nil); foo = [NSString alloc]; assert(foo!=nil); foo = [foo init]; assert(foo!=nil);
– bacarJan 30, 2012 at 22:33 -
1Aha - I've realised you mean instance variables are init'd to
nil
when the object that they are members of isalloc
'd– bacarJan 30, 2012 at 22:36
From Transitioning to ARC Release Notes:
Stack Variables Are Initialized with
nil
Using ARC, strong, weak, and autoreleasing stack variables are now implicitly initialized with
nil
. For example:- (void)myMethod { NSString *name; NSLog(@"name: %@", name); }will log
null
for the value of name rather than perhaps crashing.
nil
, I think. Local variables would point to garbage. I think that has been the case always. Do you remember any specifics?