Whenever I need to create a new NSString variable I always alloc and init it.
No, that doesn't make sense.
The variable exists from the moment the program encounters the point where you declare it:
NSString *myString;
This variable is not an NSString. It is storage for a pointer to an NSString. That's what the *
indicates: That this variable holds a pointer.
The NSString object exists only from the moment you create one:
[[NSString alloc] init];
and the pointer to that object is only in the variable from the moment you assign it there:
myString = [[NSString alloc] init];
//Or, initializing the variable in its declaration:
NSString *myString = [[NSString alloc] init];
Thus, if you're going to get a string?object from somewhere else (e.g., substringWithRange:
), you can skip creating a new, empty one, because you're just going to replace the pointer to the empty string with the pointer to the other one.
Sometimes you do want to create an empty string; for example, if you're going to obtain a bunch of strings one at a time (e.g., from an NSScanner) and want to concatenate some or all of them into one big string, you can create an empty mutable string (using alloc
and init
) and send it appendString:
messages to do the concatenations.
You also need to release
any object you create by alloc
. This is one of the rules in the Memory Management Programming Guide.
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