Weak Self in Blocks

耗尽温柔 提交于 2019-12-01 01:03:45

That check is unnecessary, and is giving you a false sense of security.

Here's the problem:

__weak typeof(self) weakSelf = self;
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
    if (!weakSelf) { return; }
    // THE LINE OF INTEREST
    [weakSelf doSomething];
});

At THE LINE OF INTEREST, some other thread might clear the last strong reference to self, at which point weakSelf is set to nil. So the doSomething message gets sent to nil, which is “safe” (it does nothing), but might not be what you expected!

It's worse if you want to take a different action when weakSelf is nil, e.g.

__weak typeof(self) weakSelf = self;
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
    if (weakSelf) {
        [weakSelf doSomething];
    } else {
        [someOtherObject doSomethingElse];
    }
});

In this case, between the time the block verifies that weakSelf is not nil and the time it sends the doSomething message, weakSelf might become nil, and neither doSomething nor doSomethingElse will actually run.

The correct solution is this:

__weak typeof(self) weakSelf = self;
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
    typeof(self) strongSelf = weakSelf;
    if (strongSelf) {
        [strongSelf doSomething];
    } else {
        [someOtherObject doSomethingElse];
    }
});

In this case, copying weakSelf to strongSelf (which is strong by default) is atomic. If weakSelf was nil, strongSelf will be nil. If weakSelf was not nil, strongSelf will not be nil, and will be a strong reference to the object, preventing it from being deallocated before the doSomething message.

It seems quite unnecessary since calling a message on nil is a no-op. (Nothing happens)

^{
    [weakSelf doSomething]; //Does nothing if weakSelf is nil
}

The only reason I can think you might want to do this is if other messages (not on self) shouldn't be called

^{
    // Here I don't want to add weakSelf as an observer if it's nil
    if (!weakSelf) return;

    [OtherClass addObserverForSomething:weakSelf];
}

Weak references do not retain the referred object. If none else is retaining it, the object is released and the weak references refers to nil.

Therefore it is possible that your code is executed with a weakSelf that refers nil. But this is no reason to check for it at all. Especially in Objective-C you use a defined behavior, if you send a message nil. I. e. it is perfect code, if you set a property using a nil reference. It simply goes to nowhere.

Of course sometime you do not want to interact with nil. In such a case you have to check for it.

BTW: You need weakSelf only in some, rarely circumstances. It is an urban legend that in closures in general references to self has to be weak to prevent retain cycles. It has not been true, it is not true and it will never be true.

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!