Reputation: 6510
I have downloaded the iOS 5 SDK and found that ARC is a great feature of the new Apple compiler. For the time being, many third party frameworks don't support ARC. Could I use ARC for my new code and keep the current retain/release code unchanged? The ARC converter doesn't work here, because some frameworks, such as JSONKit, cannot be converted to ARC by using the converter.
Edit:
The answer is to add -fno-objc-arc
to the compiler flags for the files you don't want ARC. In Xcode 4, you can do this under your target -> Build Phases -> Compile Sources.
Upvotes: 183
Views: 54767
Reputation: 1545
If you want to disable Automatic Reference Counting for some Files then its really simple to do just follow the steps.You add compiler flags in Targets -> Build Phases -> Compile Sources.
The flag used is -fno-objc-arc press enter after writing it.! You have to double click on the right column of the row under Compiler Flags. Hope it helps Thanks :)
Upvotes: 35
Reputation: 1251
It is possible to disable ARC for individual files by adding the -fno-objc-arc compiler flag for those files.
How can I disable ARC for a single file in a project?
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 21571
It is not very intuitive how to disable ARC on MULTIPLE files, for a while I was do it one by one until a figured out how to do that.
Upvotes: 78
Reputation: 96323
The public ARC docs, while not directly clear on this point, seem to suggest that as long as each class is either all ARC or all manually-managed, the classes can be integrated into a single program.
You only can't mix ARC and non-ARC in a single class; the document says that sending retain
, release
, autorelease
, or retainCount
messages by any means (including timers and delayed performs, which use @selector
) is banned in ARC code. So you can't do non-ARC in an ARC class (because the necessary messages are banned) and you can't do ARC in a non-ARC class (because ARC adds syntax elements that are invalid without ARC).
The same document is a bit clearer on whether you can integrate non-ARC libraries/frameworks into an ARC program: Yes. It doesn't mention whether you can use ARC libraries/frameworks in a program where all your code is non-ARC, but given all of the above, the implication seems to be yes.
Upvotes: 73