I\'m declaring an NSString property in a class and objective-c is complaining that:
NSString no \'assign\', \'retain\', or \'copy\' attribute is specifie
I think it is drawing your attention to the fact that a assign
is being used, as opposed to retain
or copy
. Since an NSString
is an object, in a reference-counted environment (ie without Garbage Collection) this can be potentially "dangerous" (unless it is intentional by design).
However, the difference between assign
, retain
and copy
are as follows:
assign: In your setter method for the property, there is a simple assignment of your instance variable to the new value, eg:
- (void)setString:(NSString*)newString
{
string = newString;
}
This can cause problems since Objective-C objects use reference counting, and therefore by not retaining the object, there is a chance that the string could be deallocated whilst you are still using it.
retain: this retains the new value in your setter method. For example:
- (void)setString:(NSString*)newString
{
[newString retain];
[string release];
string = newString;
}
This is safer, since you explicitly state that you want to maintain a reference of the object, and you must release it before it will be deallocated.
copy: this makes a copy of the string in your setter method:
- (void)setString:(NSString*)newString
{
if(string!=newString)
{
[string release];
string = [newString copy];
}
}
This is often used with strings, since making a copy of the original object ensures that it is not changed whilst you are using it.