What I've done is to release anything from a view in this method, but my intuition told me I might do it wrong.
In most cases, what kind of resources should be killed in didReceiveMemoryWarning
?
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What I've done is to release anything from a view in this method, but my intuition told me I might do it wrong.
In most cases, what kind of resources should be killed in didReceiveMemoryWarning
?
You can release anything here that you can easily recreate.
A common idiom in iOS software is to use lazy initialization.
With lazy init you don't initialise ivars in the init method, you do it in the getter instead after a check on wether it already exists:
@interface ViewController ()
@property (strong,readonly)NSString *testData;
@end
@implementation ViewController
@synthesize testData=_testData;
// Override the default getter for testData
-(NSString*)testData
{
if(nil==_testData)
_testData=[self createSomeData];
return _testData;
}
- (void)didReceiveMemoryWarning
{
[super didReceiveMemoryWarning];
_testData=nil;
}
In this situation the memory for testData is initialised on it's first use, discarded in didReceiveMemoryWarning
, then safely re-created the next time it's required.
_testData=nil;
and then call the parent method via [super didReceiveMemoryWarning];
? also doing [_object release];
is a good idea if it is not needed anymore.
– DooMMasteR
Dec 4 '15 at 8:35
You should use Instruments
feature to test which objects are taking more memory in your application. Then in didReceiveMemoryWarning
delegate callback dealloc
, release
those objects.
Usually media files (audio, video, images) take more memory than other kind of things. So you should focus them first.
One example i am posting...which i have copied from somwhere... it might give you some idea..
- (void)didReceiveMemoryWarning {
// Release anything that's not essential, such as cached data (meaning
// instance variables, and what else...?)
// Obviously can't access local variables such as defined in method
// loadView, so can't release them here We can set some instance variables
// as nil, rather than call the release method on them, if we have defined
// setters that retain nil and release their old values (such as through use
// of @synthesize). This can be a better approach than using the release
// method, because this prevents a variable from pointing to random remnant
// data. Note in contrast, that setting a variable directly (using "=" and
// not using the setter), would result in a memory leak.
self.myStringB = nil;
self.myStringD = nil;
[myStringA release];// No setter defined - must release it this way
[myStringC release];// No setter defined - must release it this way
/* 3. MUST CONFIRM: NOT necessary to release outlets here - See override of
setView instead.
self.labelA = nil;
self.imageViewA = nil;
self.subViewA = nil;
*/
// Releases the view if it doesn't have a superview
[super didReceiveMemoryWarning];
}
view(Will|Did)Unload
) – Alessandro Vendruscolo Jun 5 '14 at 7:50