官术网_书友最值得收藏!

Understanding deinitialization and its customization

At some specific times, our app won't require to work with an instance anymore. For example, once you calculate the perimeter of a regular hexagon and display the results to the user, you don't need the specific RegularHexagon instance anymore. Some programming languages require you to be careful about leaving live instances alive, and you have to explicitly destroy them and deallocate the memory that it consumed.

Swift uses an automatic reference counting, also known as ARC, to automatically deallocate the memory used by instances that aren't referenced anymore. When Swift detects that you aren't referencing an instance anymore, Swift executes the code specified within the instance's deinitializer before the instance is deallocated from memory. Thus, the deinitializer can still access all of the instance's resources.

Tip

You can think of deinitializers as equivalents of destructors in other programming languages such as C# and Java. You can use deinitializers to perform any necessary cleanup before the objects are deallocated and removed from memory.

For example, think about the following situation: you need to count the number of instances of a specific class that are being kept alive. You can have a variable shared by all the classes. Then, customize the class initializer to atomically increase the value for the counter—that is, increase the value of the variable shared by all the classes. Finally, customize the class deinitializer to atomically decrease the value for the counter. This way, you can check the value of this variable to know the objects that are being referenced in your application.

主站蜘蛛池模板: 收藏| 丰镇市| 获嘉县| 金塔县| 西乌| 镇坪县| 襄樊市| 通州市| 尚义县| 灵台县| 兴国县| 旬阳县| 龙井市| 永泰县| 孝义市| 温泉县| 剑河县| 屏南县| 盐边县| 密山市| 贵德县| 枣强县| 望城县| 宁陵县| 澄迈县| 大英县| 黄陵县| 二手房| 曲麻莱县| 宁国市| 周宁县| 福建省| 菏泽市| 正宁县| 德格县| 黄大仙区| 正镶白旗| 通州区| 余庆县| 德庆县| 祥云县|