问题
I'm a little confused regarding Swift's memory management. Can someone explain to me how come kid1 always stays at the same memory address? Even when I do kid1=kid2 or initialize a new object?
回答1:
Your code prints the memory location of the kid1 variable,
and that does not change if you assign a new value to the variable.
If Kid is a reference type (class) then you can use
ObjectIdentifier to get a unique identifier for the class instance
that the variable references:
var kid1 = Kid(name: "A")
var kid2 = Kid(name: "B")
print(ObjectIdentifier(kid1)) // ObjectIdentifier(0x0000000100b06220)
print(ObjectIdentifier(kid2)) // ObjectIdentifier(0x0000000100b06250)
kid1 = kid2
print(ObjectIdentifier(kid1)) // ObjectIdentifier(0x0000000100b06250)
The object identifier happens to be the address of the pointed-to instance, but that is an undocumented implementation detail. If you need to convert an object reference to a real pointer then you can do (compare How to cast self to UnsafeMutablePointer<Void> type in swift)
print(Unmanaged.passUnretained(kid1).toOpaque())
回答2:
Why kid1 is pointing to the same MemoryAddress each time?
In general, a class is a reference type. Which means, all instances of a class will share a single copy of data.
I.e, it's like a mutable data, if you change a data at any once instance of class, then it will affect that change to all its dependent instances.
It mainly deals with the memory addresses.
I think you have declared your class like below:
class Kid {
var name: String?
init(name:String) {
self.name = name
}
}
then for
var kid1 = Kid(name: "A"): Forkid1instance it will assign some memory address, say<Kid: 0x60400024b400>var kid2 = Kid(name: "B"): Forkid2instance it will assign some other memory address, say<Kid: 0x60400024b760>when you do
kid1 =kid2:kid1memory address will get changed tokid2memory address. So,kid1andkid2will pointing to same memory address.kid1.name = "C": now if a changekid1.name,..it will reflect tokid2.namevalue also,because both are pointing to same memory address.
Therefore you get:
kid1.name == "C"
kid2.name == "C"
回答3:
There are 2 categories that are supported by Swift (Value Types, Reference Type). We have 3 different behaviours that we can have for those types - Copy by reference, Copy by value and Copy-on-Write. Classes as in your case are using copy by reference which means both instances point to same address - share a single copy of data. More details are described in my post about swift memory management and performance, I go as deep as binary values in the memory. I hope it helps: Swift Memory Management and Performance
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/40446162/swifts-memory-management