22

I would like to store a zeroing weak reference to an object in a NSDictionary. This is for a reference to a parent NSDictionary, so I can crawl back up a large structure without searching.

I can not use __weak here; even if my local reference is weak, the NSDictionary will store a strong reference to the object that was weakly referenced. And, of course, NSDictionary can't have nil objects.

I'm on iOS, not Mac, so NSHashTable isn't available. And I only want one object to be weak; the rest should still be strong.

(I'm going to post my answer, so I have something to mark as accepted if there's no better answer. But I'm hoping someone has a better answer.)

1
  • I created this to be a dictionary that stores objects as effectively zeroing weak references. It could be modified (and cleaned up) to serve your purposes. Aug 24, 2013 at 7:03

3 Answers 3

39

In iOS 6+ you can use NSMapTable and choose if you want objects and/or keys to be weak or strong.

5
  • 2
    Clearly the best answer for today and forward. Thanks. Feb 15, 2013 at 2:59
  • 5
    NSMapTable might not behave as expected: cocoamine.net/blog/2013/12/13/…
    – nehz
    Jun 6, 2015 at 18:00
  • 1
    NSMapTable will do the job. But still curious about how valueWithNonretainedObject works? It holds a __weak reference or __unsafe_unretained one. @Timo say it works like __unsafe_unretained . Is that correct?
    – Nickolas
    Apr 7, 2016 at 9:47
  • That is easy to test. Make an autorelease pool. Set the value of the key to your object. "destroy" your object. Then after the autorelease pool check the value of the key Apr 9, 2016 at 9:24
  • @Nickolas nsmaptable doesn't support the options you ask! Apr 9, 2016 at 9:32
15

I've settled on defining a "container" class with a single member, like this:

@interface Parent : NSObject
@property (nonatomic, weak) id parent;
@end

@implementation Parent

@synthesize parent = _parent;

- (id)initWithParent: (id)parent;
{
    if (( self = [super init] )) {
        _parent = parent;
    }
    return self;
}
@end

And using it:

id parentRef = [[Parent alloc] initWithParent: parent];
[newElement setObject: parentRef forKey: ParentKey];

I think this will work for me, but it seems crazy that there's no better way built in to Foundation.

3
  • Sounds like the only solution to me - that's how I would have done it as well. Or an NSValue but that wouldn't zero out. Jan 6, 2012 at 18:56
  • 1
    I'm having the same problem and I also thought about a container, I still didn't tried but I'm trying to make make something close to what you do with block id __weak weakObject=strongObject; [optionDict setValue:[NSValue valueWithNonretainedObject:tmpObject] forKey:key]; still need to figure out if it works.
    – Andrea
    Mar 6, 2012 at 14:02
  • 1
    Old comment, but I'll add this one for new visitors. What Andrea says won't work, the dictionary would retain the object anyway.
    – Emanuel
    Dec 10, 2014 at 18:39
7

There is a built-in way; just use:

[array addObject:[NSValue valueWithNonretainedObject:object]];

Then to access the object later, use:

id object = [[array objectAtIndex:i] nonretainedObjectValue];

If the value has been released since you added it then "object" will be an invalid pointer under iOS 4.x, and (I'm assuming) will be nil under 5.x with ARC enabled.

EDIT: my assumption was wrong - it's not weak under ARC (see discussion below).

2
  • The dangling pointer should never be accessed, though, as your object is close-to-death at that moment. So accessing the parent here should be a bug anyway, which in this case isn't hidden by niling out.
    – Eiko
    Nov 22, 2012 at 17:09
  • 2
    @Eiko, you're wrong. It's a common case for observer pattern.
    – Aleks N.
    Nov 29, 2012 at 14:19

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