On May 13, 2013, at 21:30 , Andy Lee <[email protected]> wrote:
> I believe ARC keeps it alive by virtue of self being a strong reference.
It isn't, not exactly. According to section 7.3 of the Clang ARC spec:
"The self parameter variable of an Objective-C method is never actually
retained by the implementation. It is undefined behavior, or at least
dangerous, to cause an object to be deallocated during a message send to that
object."
This is the case when the receiver of the method invocation is itself a strong
reference. If it's actually a __weak reference, it *is* retained for the
duration of the method execution, because of the rules for retention of __weak
objects used in expressions.
> I did a quick test and found that if I do
>
> - (void) mouseDown: (NSEvent*) event
> {
> NSView* superView = [self superview];
> [self removeFromSuperview];
> // [superView addSubview: self];
> }
>
> ...then dealloc does in fact get called. But if I uncomment that one line,
> which references self, dealloc does not get called.
I suspect it works because the ARC implementation is "suboptimal", in the sense
that it's causing self to be autoreleased as a result of being used in a later
expression. If the implementation ever improved to avoid using autorelease, I'd
expect it to start crashing in this scenario.
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