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static func appendMissingObjToArray(var oldArray:[AnyObject],newArray:[AnyObject]){
    for n in newArray{
        var isExist = false
        for o in oldArray{
            if(n.isEqual(o)){
                //exist
                isExist = true
                break
            }
        }
        if(!isExist){
            oldArray.append(n)
        }
    }
}

The above function is the append some data from newArray to oldArray. when this function is done. And getting data from the oldArray, I got BAD ACCESS error. so I think it is due to the newly added object in oldArray have been deallocated and the newArray is released.

Any thing I can do for avoid this?

2
  • Can you provide more details about the error: things like which line, what was in the various variables, which iteration of each loop, etc.? Jul 27, 2015 at 14:19
  • 1
    It's important to understand that arrays in Swift are value type which means they are copied, not referenced.
    – Logan
    Jul 27, 2015 at 15:21

1 Answer 1

1

I believe that you need to declare your oldArray parameter as an inout. As follows:

//...
static func appendMissingObjToArray(inout oldArray:[AnyObject],newArray:[AnyObject]){
//...

You can then do e.g (note the ampersand & below:

class01.appendMissingObjToArray(&myOldArray, newArray: myNewArray)
println(myOldArray) // will contain the appended result

Done like this myOldArray (the passed array) will be mutated. So you may need to pass a copy of your original if retaining the original is important.

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