MatterGoal
MatterGoal

Reputation: 16430

using ARC, lifetime qualifier assign and unsafe_unretained

i'm a little confused about these two qualifiers... With ARC instead of using weak (i.e. if I need support iOS 4) I can use unsafe_unretained losing the auto-nil features... the final result seems to be similar to assign.

It would be really interesting any link of Apple documentation on this argument... I can find only a few rows here

Upvotes: 8

Views: 5546

Answers (1)

一二三
一二三

Reputation: 21249

Clang's technical specification of ARC goes into much more detail about how the qualifiers work.

But, to answer your question: assign and __unsafe_unretained are not the same thing. assign is a property attribute that tells the compiler how to synthesise the property's setter implementation, while __unsafe_unretained is an ownership qualifier that tells ARC how to insert retain/release calls. But they are related: when declaring a property, assign implies __unsafe_unretained ownership.

Prior to ARC, assign was the default property ownership qualifier; but with ARC enabled, the default for retainable object pointer types is strong. (For scalars and other pointer types, assign is still the default.)

Upvotes: 16

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