Should you set the delegate to nil in the class using the delegate or in the class itself

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遥遥无期
遥遥无期 2020-12-16 15:44

If class A is using class B and class A is class B\'s delegate, is it ok if the delegate is set to nil in class B\'s dealloc? I have seen code usually resetting the delegate

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  • 2020-12-16 16:08

    As far as I know, its best practice to (assign) a delegate, such that you avoid circular references on retain counts for situations just like this. If you've set up the property properly, ie:

    @property (assign) id<BDelegate> delegate;
    

    You shouldn't have to perform any memory management in the dealloc, as the retain count is not bumped when you call self.b.delegate = self; -- unlike using (retain) or (copy)

    Make sense? It would be fine to set the delegate to nil, but whats the point?

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  • 2020-12-16 16:09

    Yes, you should set the classB's delegate property to nil in classA's dealloc.

    It's not a memory management issue, because delegate properties should be marked assign, not retain, to avoid retain cycles (otherwise the dealloc will never be called). The issue is that otherwise classB might message classA after it has been released.

    For example, if classB has a delagate call to say "being hidden", and classB is released just after classA, it would message the already dealloc'ed classA causing a crash.

    And remember, you can't always guarentee the dealloc order, especial if they are autoreleased.

    So yes, nil out the delegate property in classA's dealloc.

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  • 2020-12-16 16:22

    First, a few observations...

    1. You've forgotten to call [super dealloc] at the end of your own dealloc method.
    2. Since 'a' created 'b', and if no other objects have retained 'b', there no point in nilling the delegate in the -dealloc, since 'b' is about to be destroyed anyhow. If it's possible that other objects have a reference to 'b' (meaning it might outlive 'a') then set the delegate to nil.
    3. Object 'b' should be the one to take care of its delegate in its own -dealloc if necessary. (Generally, the delegator does not retain the delegate.)
    4. Avoid using properties in -init... and -dealloc methods — Apple discourages this, and for good reason. (Not only could it have unexpected side effects, but can also cause nastier, crashier problems.)
    5. Using properties (via the dot syntax) when you don't need to invisibly adds extra work. For instance, self.b.delegate = self is equivalent to [[self getB] setDelegate:self] — it's just syntactic sugar that makes it look like you're accessing the ivar directly, but you're actually not.
    6. Using properties without understanding what they do can lead to trouble. If self.b retains the value (the property is set to "assign"), you have a memory leak on your hands.

    Here's how I would probably write it:

    - (void) someFunc {
      b = [[B alloc] init];
      b.delegate = self; // or [b setDelegate:self];
    }
    
    - (void) dealloc {
      b.delegate = nil;
      [b release];
      [super dealloc];
    }
    
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