On Aug 20, 2008, at 7:43 PM, Torsten Curdt wrote:

On Aug 21, 2008, at 01:50, Ken Thomases wrote:

On Aug 20, 2008, at 6:15 PM, Torsten Curdt wrote:

I guess my questions wasn't phrased correctly. The point was more: is 'nil' really the equivalent of 0 or NULL.

Let's put it this way: freshly allocated objects have their memory zeroed out,

Why should that affect the pointer to an object?

If you make a class with ivars which are object pointers, you are guaranteed by the runtime that they are zeroed out, which is to say nil, when an instance is allocated. I was pointing out that the runtime equates zeroing out the object's memory with guaranteeing that its object-pointer ivars are nil.

From <http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/CocoaFundamentals/CocoaObjects/chapter_3_section_6.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002974-CH4-DontLinkElementID_86 >:

An allocation message does other important things besides allocating memory:
[...]
It initializes all other instance variables to zero (or to the equivalent type for zero, such as nil, NULL, and 0.0).

Right there is a guarantee that nil equals zero.

Cheers,
Ken

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